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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Crafers West's tutors include a Master of Teaching-qualified science and maths specialist with high school classroom experience, a 97.75 ATAR multi-award winner and piano teacher, an IB dux with 99.95 ATAR and university medal, experienced youth coaches, junior athletics instructors, language award recipients, and accomplished musicians and Olympiad competitors—all passionate about helping young learners excel.

Amitava
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Amitava

Tutor Heathpool, SA
To gain confidence in them and make them more methodical and improve their exam strategy and psychological approach. I can feel the wavelength of every student quickly and befit my style of teaching…
Andrea
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Andrea

Tutor Hawthorn, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is help students build their confidence in their ability to learn. This includes helping them form study habits that can aid them in their secondary and tertiary education as well as frequently revising past concepts to help them build a strong foundation for their future learning. I believe my biggest…
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Devendra
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Devendra

Tutor Hawthorn, SA
A tutor can be the perfect guidance. Besides, a tutor should have abilities to understand the performance of an individual and carry on the task in an easy and correct way. A tutor always should be smart and capable to conduct the task as per the student's abilities. As I have already worked as a teacher for more than three years before. The…
David
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David

Tutor Pasadena, SA
Our modern world is built around education and every student can expect to experience a lot of it in the future. Therefore, it is most important that a tutor should model genuine interest in learning (both the subject matter and how to learn well), so that the student him/herself enjoys the process and is encouraged to become a lifelong learner.…
Parth
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Parth

Tutor Dulwich, SA
a. Individualized Approach: Tailor the tutoring sessions to suit the student's unique learning style, strengths, and weaknesses. b. Building Confidence: Help students believe in their abilities and instill a growth mindset to overcome challenges. c. Patience and Empathy: Be patient with the student's progress, understanding that everyone…
Anusha
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Anusha

Tutor Unley Park, SA
Make sure that the kid is able to communicate any challenges that they are facing and create a healthy and fostering environment that relies more on understanding and solving the problems rather than just covering the syllabus. The ability to make teaching and understanding stuff fun by collaborating key learning skills to activities so that kids…
Bianca
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Bianca

Tutor Colonel Light Gardens, SA
Make the student feel safe is number one and to inspire a love for learning is the goal! Ensuring that the tutor presents them self in a way where the child is comfortable in your presence so they can learn and ask question is vital also. Knowing the child’s individual learning preferences and catering to this makes a huge difference also in the…
Giang
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Giang

Tutor Marryatville, SA
I think the most important thing is to give them an interest in the subjects. In my study path, I realized that the easiest way to study well in a subject is loving them. Therefore, instead of providing them with a full of academic lessons, teachers should help them feel entertained in the lessons. Then, they will find out and get better by…
Alex
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Alex

Tutor Marryatville, SA
Finding ways to get students interested and curious about what they are learning, and giving them general methods for problem-solving. Although helping them solve specific problems is important, if they are passionate about the topic and know how to approach problem-solving this gives them the desire and confidence to tackle a range of questions.…
Daniel
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Daniel

Tutor Dulwich, SA
- Facilitate open discussion about the stresses, intricacies, and difficulties of schooling (especially in Year 12) - Explain the same concept as a student's classroom teacher but in a way that is digestible to the student (offering a personal approach) - Be able to provide detailed feedback and/or comprehensive drafts for assignments and…
Umama
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Umama

Tutor Dulwich, SA
I think that being able to build a rapport with the student is one of the fundamental skills to be a good tutor. This lays the foundation for the student being comfortable in asking questions to the tutor, as well as the tutor finding a teaching style that is most suited to the student. I am confident in my ability to explain subject matter to the…
Mia
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Mia

Tutor Dulwich, SA
A tutor must be patient, flexible, honest and attentive. It is important that tutors do not give students the answer directly but allows the student to discover the answer with extra guidance. The ultimate goal of tutoring is to help students become independent learners. A tutor must be willing to adapt to different situations and learning…
Vishwani Prasadi
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Vishwani Prasadi

Tutor Unley Park, SA
The first thing a tutor can do is put themselves in the position of the student and try to understand the student's requirements. Most importantly, be patient with the student and praise them while actively engaging during the session. Maintain a student centered teaching. Firstly, I try to put myself in the position of student and try to…
Himanshu
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Himanshu

Tutor Kings Park, SA
The most important thing for the tutor is To provide confidence to the student in himself and show him the way to how he can solve the problem himself. Make him self reliant. To be able to show the practical relevance and their usage using simple and easy to remember tricks and examples from everyday life. Another of my key strengths is to…
Solomon
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Solomon

Tutor Kensington Park, SA
Ultimately the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to aid them in learning. However, along with that there must be good foundations to assist this, such as: creating an environment the student feels comfortable and happy in, building good rapport with the student and ensuring the learning content is being delivered in such a way…
Harish
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Harish

Tutor Unley, SA
By giving inputs required for a concept and asking him/her to do. Regular monitoring of his/her had to be done so that one can come to know the person is going in a right path or not. Motivating that person whenever he felts so discouraged. Knowledge Patience Willing to teach my best Open-minded Motivating…
Cynthia
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Cynthia

Tutor Unley, SA
Taking the fear out of maths for students, and help them find their own way of learning and build their self-confidence. Try to help students solve problems from different perspectives (sometimes there is more than one way to answer a problem) 1. I'm math and teaching double major, as a pre service teacher, we have been told many teaching…
Madie
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Madie

Tutor Unley, SA
I think the greatest thing is improving their learning abilities and making them confident and teach the technics of studying. Being flexible and adapt to students needs which lead them success in academic education. Persistence, Kindness, collaborative, Flexibility, Adaptability, Adjustability, listening, positivity , Act Professionally and…
Derrick
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Derrick

Tutor Kensington, SA
For me the most important thing a tutor can do is to guide the student in such a way that at the end of it, the student is able to lead by himself in the direction he was originally intended to go. It is similar to the lines of giving a man a fish to teaching him to fish. The tutor has to ignite the spark of interest in the student so that the…
Zehra Aziz
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Zehra Aziz

Tutor St Marys, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are: 1. Give one-on-one attention to students 2. Improve academic skills, self-esteem and confidence 3. Encourage self-paced and self-directed learning 4. Provide a positive and distraction free environment 5. Help overcome learning obstacles 1. Effective communication 2. Unique teaching…
Nicholas
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Nicholas

Tutor Hyde Park, SA
To get on the student level and explain things in depth so they can understand what they are working on. I am very patient and explain things very…
Jolene
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Jolene

Tutor Hyde Park, SA
Fostering a supportive & safe environment to encourage students to ask questions so I can understand their needs better. There is no such thing as silly questions! :) Simplifying complex concepts into components that can hopefully be easier to digest/understand. As a tutor, my strength lies in my ability to understand students' objectives and…
Sai Shruthi
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Sai Shruthi

Tutor Unley, SA
1. Being flexible 2. Being a good listener. 3. A good collaborator 4. A patient teacher 5. Should have a creative mind to devise creative methods which are student centric. 6. Be understanding. I am a tutor who can help students get to the depths of mathematics by developing intuitive thinking and creative methodologies. Throughout my…

Local Reviews

David is professional and explains things in detail. Keeps our son focused on tasks.
Kaz

Inside Crafers WestTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Raffy practised factorising and expanding algebraic expressions, and compared frequency tables and percentages while finishing his final assignment.

In Year 9, Lily focused on solving trigonometry problems using sine, cosine, and tangent rules to find unknown angles or sides, along with applying Pythagoras' theorem in various contexts.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Marcus revised exponential equations involving both growth and decay scenarios and received help using a graphics calculator for these problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student regularly forgot to bring essential materials, such as their graph book and textbook, leading to lost lesson time—one tutor noted, "forgot textbook, so time was lost."

In a senior class, another student finished tasks quickly but packed up immediately instead of reviewing or extending their work.

During a Year 10 algebra session, working steps were not shown clearly; the tutor remarked that this hid sign errors.

A Year 12 learner hesitated to ask questions even when confused, relying on the tutor for answers rather than engaging directly with feedback and independent problem-solving.

Recent Achievements

A Crafers West tutor recently noticed a Year 10 student who had struggled with careless mistakes in algebra now double-checking her work during sessions, catching errors before moving on.

Another high schooler, previously hesitant to speak up, has started asking the tutor to clarify tricky test questions—showing she's more comfortable seeking help rather than guessing.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to shy away from worded maths problems is now reading questions out loud and underlining key information without prompting. Last week, she completed an entire set of mixed problems independently for the first time.

Local Spots for Tutoring

If you'd prefer not to have lessons at home, tutoring can also take place at a local library—such as Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Upper Sturt Primary School.