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Private chinese tutors that come to you in person or online

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Dundas Valley's tutors include an assistant principal with 18 years of K–6 classroom leadership, a double-degree Maths/Computer Science student from James Ruse with national STEM awards, university-level educators and PhDs, seasoned private and centre tutors, a K–6 IT teacher, and high-achieving recent graduates passionate about mentoring students in maths, science, and English.

Shengyang
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Shengyang

Chinese Tutor Harris Park, NSW
Personally, I think the role of a tutor is to help student with what they need, thus we can assist them in the most effective way. For example, a tutor can figure out the weakness of a student thus the tutor can assist student to get improvement on that areas. Currently, I am doing Bachelor of Education in Usyd, After 1 year of study, I developed…
Shubo
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Shubo

Chinese Tutor Macquarie Park, NSW
To company the students and encourage them to be calm, brave, diligent and curious. A tutor should be there when his or her student needs help or company. Moreover, not only should a tutor help get the students prepared for the coming exams, but also encourage them to learn and explore. Patience and communication skills. As one grew up in a…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Chinese

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Jacob
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Jacob

Chinese Tutor Macquarie Park, NSW
As a teacher, I think the most important thing is to help students establish their own study habits and the ability to think independently. The establishment of mathematical thinking is the most important thing, because mathematics is the foundation of all science and engineering subjects and even business studies. I can teach students in English…
Eva
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Eva

Chinese Tutor Auburn, NSW
Milla
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Milla

Chinese Tutor Cherrybrook, NSW
I believe some of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to support them and present themselves as a good role model. All students are different and their learning style, ways to approach certain topics and ability to process content are all different, therefore tutors being able to support them through difficulties, pointing…
Qingyang
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Qingyang

Chinese Tutor Cherrybrook, NSW
Being a tutor means to understand what the student wants to know and give them response as soon as possible, encourage the student to do more practices in order to have a better grade I can speak multiple languages: Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese), English and Japanese (got a band 6 for Japanese extension in HSC); I am also very patient and…
Jowy
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Jowy

Chinese Tutor Gordon, NSW
A tutor that actually are able to help the students improve in their weakest subject and help them learn to grasp the knowledge in the most effective way. Also guide and encourage them to the best of their ability, also teach them exam skills that are able to set them up for all exams in the future. Having enough patience and never give up even…

Local Reviews

Going very well and very happy with Raine.
Debbie, West Pennant Hills

Inside Dundas ValleyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Lillian worked through **fraction operations and strategies for NAPLAN non-calculator questions**, focusing on backchecking answers and applying the reciprocal method when dividing fractions.

In Year 8, Max revised equations by tackling test-style problems and also practised **structuring essays for English assessments**.

Year 10 student Emily focused on **trigonometry, particularly using exact values and trigonometric identities**, as well as reviewing challenging homework from the previous week to strengthen understanding of core skills.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11, one student was inconsistent at attempting the algebra practices given and explained gaps in completing homework sheets, which led to resummarizing notes instead of building fluency through practice.

Another senior student struggled with organizing notes across lessons—using loose papers rather than a dedicated notebook—making it difficult to revisit key strategies before assessments.

For a Year 7 learner, revision focused mainly on missed or familiar topics; as a tutor noted, "Max must remember certain concepts and formulas through continued practice," but rarely reviewed more challenging material.

In Year 3, incomplete homework meant subtraction skills didn't solidify, making word problems even harder during sessions.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Dundas Valley recently noticed some great shifts across different year levels. One high school student who used to hesitate with data analysis now confidently breaks down bar and box plots, even suggesting new maths topics to tackle next session.

Another secondary student has moved from just memorising algebra patterns to actively linking concepts—like connecting financial maths and ratios—to solve unfamiliar problems, showing more initiative in planning their study approach.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student who struggled with multi-step worded questions now pauses to underline key words before deciding which operation fits best.

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 Dundas Valley Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Yates Avenue Public School.