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Private software-design-development tutors that come to you in person or online

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Dee Why's tutors include a seasoned secondary maths teacher with seven years' classroom experience, a Master's-qualified mathematician and calculus specialist, accomplished French and English language trainers, high-ATAR graduates with subject awards, dedicated peer mentors and youth leaders, plus experienced private tutors in maths, science and music—offering expertise across K–12 learning.

Malarselvi
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Malarselvi

Software Dev Tutor Chatswood, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to bring in a positive connection between the student and the subject so that learning happens naturally along with concept realization rather than focusing on memorization. 1.Good Listener 2.Passionate teacher 3.Consistent Learner 4.Mentoring peers and team. 5.Coherency in the lessons…
Harry
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Harry

Software Dev Tutor Willoughby, NSW
I think communication is one of the most crucial skills. I believe every students, somehow, are capable of learning. So even though I don't have extraordinary skills to teach them, they will learn from my explanation. But I have to know where they are at the point of time to know exactly what and how I have to teach. Having an idea of what my…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Software Dev

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Pranav
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Pranav

Software Dev Tutor Willoughby, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to foster a supportive and encouraging learning environment and to tailor their approach to the student's individual needs. It's crucial to not only help students understand the material but also to build their confidence and critical thinking skills. A tutor should inspire curiosity,…
Mitaanshu
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Mitaanshu

Software Dev Tutor Cremorne, NSW
1) Personalize the learning with students, to understand every student has raised with different learning and focus individually on there weaker sections. 2) Be honest with there parents about there growth and set realistic expectations. 1) I know what materials are relevant to students for a solid foundation of topic and also the analyzing…
Jonathan
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Jonathan

Software Dev Tutor Willoughby, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them in any way they can, this does not only apply in an academic sense but also in aspects of the students life (eg. dealing with stress, etc.) I can easily explain harder concepts in simpler terms, making it less intimidating for students when encountering new topics. Furthermore, my…

Local Reviews

Gracie, she has been very accommodating and has had the patience to work with my son. Even though I have not met her in person, she seems to be very dedicated.
Alex, Manly Vale

Inside Dee WhyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Aidan worked on finding gradients and equations of straight lines as well as interpreting graphs to connect visual data with algebraic rules.

Year 10 student Olivia focused on quadratic equations, using different factorisation methods and completing the square to solve problems.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Ethan explored circles, hyperbolas, and exponential equations, tackling graph sketching and identifying key features of each curve type.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student found simultaneous equations challenging when only points and gradients were provided; she relied heavily on worked examples rather than practicing independently.

In Year 9, a student's tendency to "go extremely fast through questions" led to missed steps in algebra, as one tutor noted, "needs to slow down and show working."

Meanwhile, a Year 7 student hesitated with division tricks—impatience made her guess rather than apply strategies from previous lessons.

For a primary learner tackling times tables, confidence dropped when faced with the unfamiliar 8s and 9s; skipping practice left gaps that slowed progress in multi-step problems.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Dee Why noticed a big shift for Morgan (Year 7): she now breaks down tricky compound area problems into smaller shapes without prompting—last term, she'd freeze if it wasn't straightforward.

A Year 10 student recently tackled financial maths and, after previously making frequent errors with formulas, managed to complete a full practice set independently and accurately.

In English, a Year 11 student who used to write vague answers has started linking ideas more clearly in essays and even asked for feedback on structure before submitting her draft.

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 Dee Why Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Kevin's Catholic Primary School.