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Private chemistry tutors that come to you in person or online

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Fraser's tutors include a former school maths and science teacher with decades of experience, a classroom assistant who's taught Year 9 engineering, an ICT educator with nine years' school teaching in Bhutan, several high-ATAR university scholars (up to 97.8), accomplished competition participants, and caring mentors with proven skills supporting young learners academically and personally.

Emily
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Emily

Chemistry Tutor Crace, ACT
Successful teaching stems from clear communication both verbally and emotionally. It's vital to notice when a student is struggling and being able to address that pain point from multiple angles until the idea clicks for them. Ultimately the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel safe and curious. Trust is important to…
Jinan
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Jinan

Chemistry Tutor Nicholls, ACT
I really believe that the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be patient towards them and make them feel comfortable to keep asking for help again and again. I once had a tutor for Specialist Methods in Year 11. He would teach very fast and not make sure that I had fully understood the topic. He'd also get very impatient, to the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Chemistry

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Iris
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Iris

Chemistry Tutor Lawson, ACT
Ensure that the student feels safe, supported and comfortable to become the best version of themselves from guidance. Ability to quickly build rapport, and being patient with the student. I am always cheerful and try to challenge students in the best way…
Victor
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Victor

Chemistry Tutor Palmerston, ACT
I believe that the most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is to allow the student to feel free to ask questions and to query explanations. This way, it allows for me to answer their initial query as well as giving me the opportunity to proactively infer other areas that they may not completely understand. My strengths are centred…
John
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John

Chemistry Tutor Bonner, ACT
In my opinion, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide personalized guidance and support, foster a positive learning environment, and encourage critical thinking and independent learning. Tutors should strive to understand their students' unique learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses, and adapt their approach…
Sukhdip
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Sukhdip

Chemistry Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Listening and understanding the needs and challenges of your students is essential. When you take the time to listen to your students and understand their unique situations, you can provide more targeted and effective support. This can also help build trust and rapport between you and your students, which can lead to better outcomes. The ability…
Iulia
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Iulia

Chemistry Tutor Lyneham, ACT
I believe it is essential to understand your student, and adapt your teaching and communication style to benefit their learning style, age, personality, and knowledge. It is important for a tutor to really believe in their student, and do all they can to help them excel. I believe I have excellent communication skills as I am able to adapt to each…

Local Reviews

Dineth was fantastic. Really prepared.
Peta

Inside FraserTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Caledon worked on understanding the volume and surface area formulas for cubes, prisms, and spheres using diagrams to visualize three-dimensional shapes.

In Year 10, Anise focused on applying the chain rule to differentiate compound functions and practiced advanced algebraic manipulation within complex differentiation problems.

For Year 11, James spent his session revising exponential functions and logarithms, with extra attention given to solving real-world application questions involving exponentials.

Recent Challenges

A Year 7 student forgot to complete set homework for two consecutive weeks, which meant lesson time was spent reviewing unfinished tasks instead of building new skills.

In Year 11, one student's messy mathematical grammar—like misusing the equals sign—made their algebra solutions hard to follow; as a tutor observed, "being able to show how you got the answer is often just as important."

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student avoided showing working out and preferred mental calculations, but this led to errors being missed in multi-step problems.

In each case, progress stalled when habits around organization or clear written work slipped.

Recent Achievements

A Fraser tutor noticed Anise, a senior student, making a leap in calculus—she not only applied the chain rule confidently but also tackled abstract logarithm questions with minimal guidance after initially hesitating with variable-based problems.

Caledon, working through high school algebra and trigonometry, showed new independence by recalling last semester's algebra to solve unfamiliar trig equations without prompting and completing multi-step rearrangement problems solo after previously needing step-by-step help.

In primary sessions, Jarrah moved from mixing up conversion steps to consistently substituting the right numbers when converting units, finishing his worksheet without needing reminders.

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 Kippax Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Fraser Primary School.