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Tutors in Hadfield include a PhD mathematician with 14+ years' experience and teaching awards, a university Dux and published science author (ATAR 98.9), a postgraduate-trained primary teacher with Golden Key honors, seasoned K–12 maths specialists, creative writing experts, and multiple peer mentors and youth coaches with strong records supporting student achievement.

Robert
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Robert

Economics Tutor Brunswick, VIC
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is give them confidence. With confidence students can approach problems with an open mind and really try their best. My strength as a tutor is my enthusiasm and attention to detail. I have worked with a variety of people and am motivated and keen. I also am focussed and emphasise the…
Feiqiong
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Feiqiong

Economics Tutor Brunswick, VIC
In my opinion, improving students' academic performance is important, but is not the ultimate goal. I think the most important thing a tutor can do is to teach students good learning methods and improve their self-study ability, which makes them benefit for life. Firstly, I am a easy going, gentle, kind, and friendly person. It is easy for me to…
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Tevisht
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Tevisht

Economics Tutor Ascot Vale, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make the student love a subject because if this happens, the improvement will follow mechanically. A tutor should be able to make the student challenge himself and want to improve for his own sake. The tutor must also make sure that the morale of the student remains high as he should…
Neelkumar
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Neelkumar

Economics Tutor Travancore, VIC
1. Understand them, identify their strengths and weaknesses and according to which teach/guide them. 2. Motivate students in such a way that they become self-learners which eventually would help them succeed in every areas of their life. Perseverance Patience Good communication skills Maintains confidentiality Customized teaching style to…
Robert
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Robert

Economics Tutor Keilor Park, VIC
the most important thing for a tutor to do for the student is to connect with the student develop some sort of bond with the student so the student can trust and understand what the tutor is teaching them, also its important that the tutor not rush with the student and the tutor helps develop the students confidence in approaching the subject As a…
Zacky
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Zacky

Economics Tutor Lalor, VIC
Inspire them to work hard and enjoy the process of learning and studying. Because I am young I feel I can build a great rapport with young students and encourage them to work hard and believe in…
Clarissa
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Clarissa

Economics Tutor Avondale Heights, VIC
As a tutor, I believe that the most important thing to do for a student is to find a way to explain concepts until it is finally able to "click" with students. Every individual has different experiences and skill levels, especially in a subject like mathematics. Thus, sometimes it is important to approach the same concept from different…
PRISCILLA
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PRISCILLA

Economics Tutor Parkville, VIC
Teaching them the right way to learn. Tutoring is not just teaching them textbook concepts or mathematical formulas, it's about teaching them how to keep practicing. I know the keys and tricks to score well in exams. Growing up in Malaysia, they educated us to present every Mathematics step precisely, and I will be able to show students how they…
Thomas
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Thomas

Economics Tutor Parkville, VIC
The most important thing is to engage with the student. It is more beneficial for the student and tutor to work together and be open to new ideas or methods to tackle questions. Instead of the tutor forcing the student to use one method, engaging with the student will lead to the most effective way to solve the question and will lead to successful…
Olivia
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Olivia

Economics Tutor Parkville, VIC
An important thing would be to instil a sense of confidence in a student about a particular subject, theory, or whatever it is that they are struggling with. Without confidence, even if a student may know the content or understand the theory, it can be difficult to do well in that subject. This is achieved by repeating a concept or practising it a…
Jonathan
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Jonathan

Economics Tutor Parkville, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do is present information in a way that their student understands. All students learn differently to others so taking the time to understand the most effective teaching method for each student is fundamental. I believe I have an ability to communicate in a way that is eloquent yet very easy to comprehend. I…
Kasun
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Kasun

Economics Tutor Carlton, VIC
In my opinion it would be to use examples applicable to the student and help them understand the concept instead of having them memorize the book for the exam. When I was in year 4 I was quite weak in my mathematics, however by year 12 I was the strongest student in my high school getting a number of prizes. This improvement was enabled by me…
Joel
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Joel

Economics Tutor Carlton, VIC
Being patient and guide them through how they should solve their problems instead of forcing only one way to them. Give them examples on how things should be with the aid of diagrams to picture the problem to them and make them think of the solution instead of blindly giving them answers. I am a persevered and patient person. I will be patient and…
Xuanhao
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Xuanhao

Economics Tutor Carlton, VIC
Spark interests in students that encourage them to pursued further in their own time. Wide range of background knowledge to draw upon; an excellent ability of explaining complicated problems using easy to understand, simple terms; very friendly and approachable…
Aswin
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Aswin

Economics Tutor Epping, VIC
Being punctual and getting the learning out comes!! Tests Confident in what im teaching and being…

Local Reviews

professional and friendly tutor was matched with my son's needs.
Megan, Hadfield

Inside HadfieldTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Oliver worked on drawing linear graphs, understanding gradient, and the y = mx + b form, using clear step-by-step examples.

In Year 10, Oliver focused on solving simultaneous linear equations with the elimination method and reviewed circle geometry including area calculations.

For Year 5, Myki practised multiplication and factors through revision activities and extended this to cover fractions, division, highest common factor, and lowest multiple.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student often preferred to solve algebraic equations mentally and skipped writing out steps, as one tutor noted: "He likes to solve equations in his head. He needs to write how he solved the problems." This habit made it harder to catch sign errors or understand where confusion started, especially with negatives and indices.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student's messy hand counting for subtraction sometimes led to miscounts—extra time was spent correcting basic errors rather than building new skills.

In Year 10 probability, not reading written questions closely left key parts unanswered and confidence dropped after each unclear result.

Recent Achievements

One Hadfield tutor recently noticed a big change with Oliver in Year 9 maths: after struggling to make sense of linear equations, he's now confidently graphing lines using the y = mx + b formula and even tackled substitution methods without hesitation.

In another session, a Year 11 student who previously froze on probability questions was able to tackle class problems independently after working through both experimental and theoretical probability with support.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to make frequent mistakes when hand counting has started getting through addition and subtraction columns accurately—last week he finished all ten problems without any errors.

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 Glenroy Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Thomas More's School.