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Tutors in Grose Wold include a Science Olympiad distinction winner and multi-year Dux, a PhD scholar awarded for research excellence, experienced K–12 maths and science tutors with degrees from Macquarie and UNSW, school captains and peer mentors, accomplished subject prize-winners, and educators skilled at supporting diverse learning needs—including extension-level mathematics and creative coaching.

Emily
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Emily

Tutor Grose Wold, NSW
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to give him or her self-confidence. I believe that this is especially important for struggling students. A tutor must encourage students and provide them with the tools required for academic success. A student should enjoy tutoring sessions whilst consistently improving during them.…
Lily
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Lily

Tutor Grose Wold, NSW
Tutors can help give students the foundational understanding and confidence needed to independently apply new skills. This can often make students appreciate or even enjoy subjects they may have previously thought were too difficult. I very much understand the importance of being patient and kind when tutoring. I am also a reliable person with a…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

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Niraj
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Niraj

Tutor Richmond, NSW
Build a Positive relationship, Assess their needs, Provide Clear explanations, Encourage active learning, Foster a growth mindset, Monitor Progress, Maintain regular communication. Strong subject knowledge, Patience, Communication…
Santosh
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Santosh

Tutor Richmond, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do are to inspire confidence, foster a positive attitude toward learning, and tailor lessons to meet the student’s unique needs. Helping students build a strong conceptual foundation and develop problem-solving skills is essential for long-term success. My strengths as a tutor include simplifying complex…
anton
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anton

Tutor Castlereagh, NSW
To explain why things are the way they are, for students to understand the inner workings of mathematics, engineering and physics methodology. As I only teach online, it allows students to do it in the comfort of their own home, with consistent lessons not affected by travel hindrances. Teaching online lessons I can teach engaging classes allowing…
Luke
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Luke

Tutor Castlereagh, NSW
To be a personal, and educational anchor for a student, helping to relieve stresses that come from classroom and school-life and helping to further progress their learning abilities and educational prowess to new heights. Patience, understanding and an enthusiasm for learning. I understand that some students are not well suited for the classroom…
Anya Mary
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Anya Mary

Tutor Hobartville, NSW
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student include creating a supportive and encouraging learning environment, offering clear and comprehensible explanations, and adapting teaching methods to fit the student's unique needs. It's also vital to boost the student's confidence and help them develop effective study habits and…
Alexa
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Alexa

Tutor Hobartville, NSW
The utterly most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to listen and understand. To listen to them talk about where they need the extra help and why the believe they do not get the certain material, and to understand how they best learn. I believe that tutoring is beneficial to both parties as I am able to teach my students as well as…
Yusen
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Yusen

Tutor Richmond, NSW
A tutor should take the time to understand each student's unique strengths, weaknesses, learning styles, and goals. This enables the tutor to tailor their teaching approach and materials to meet the student's specific needs. Moreover, a tutor should encourage active learning by engaging students in discussions, asking questions, and involving them…
Elise
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Elise

Tutor Richmond, NSW
Helping students to learn and progress in a way which suits their learning style and ways of thinking is an important thing tutors can do for students. If a tutor can adapt to this I believe the student will learn both with more efficiency and more enjoyment. This enjoyment is also of great importance to help students come to a love of learning,…
Myca
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Myca

Tutor Richmond, NSW
the most important things a tutor can do for a student are provided academic guidance, human connection, and consistency I can relate to children (or older students) on a personal level, as well as the ability to explain complex concepts in a simple manner. I am aware of the world, feelings, and emotions that children…
Bernadine
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Bernadine

Tutor Hawkesbury Heights, NSW
To make learning fun, to think outside the box and to listen to the student's problems and opinions I have the ability to listen and explain to the…

Local Reviews

Hannah is very good and my son was happy.
Om

Inside Grose WoldTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Isaac worked on understanding BODMAS and practiced long division, alongside reviewing his English creative writing homework with a focus on literal versus metaphoric language.

In Year 10, Luke tackled algebraic equations by moving pronumerals and numbers across equations and also reviewed how to apply BODMAS rules to simplify expressions.

For Year 12, Zahraa focused on refining her economics essay drafts, paying special attention to linking economic objectives and policies while incorporating relevant statistics and graphs.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 mathematics, incomplete homework and inconsistent revision led to formula recall issues—"he often writes something on this page or does a drawing which significantly lowers his concentration," as noted by the tutor. This meant forgetting key steps in composite shape problems and struggling with multi-part questions.

Meanwhile, a Year 7 student left parts of an adolescent presentation unfinished until the night before it was due, resulting in missed criteria.

In English (Year 6), not revising notes from previous sessions limited knowledge retention; foundational grammar points slipped when not revisited. On tired days, engagement dropped further, slowing learning noticeably.

Recent Achievements

A Grose Wold tutoring session saw a Year 11 student, Zahraa, take on feedback about "waffling" in her essays—she now plans her arguments more tightly and handed in a draft with clearer structure than before.

In Year 10 English, Shreyans shifted from struggling to generate ideas to breaking down essay questions independently; his last story was much more cohesive because he linked it back to previous writing.

For a younger learner, one tutor noticed improved focus during maths lessons—this student used to fidget and lose track but now completes all set questions without needing extra breaks.

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 Richmond Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Grose View Public School.