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Hampstead Gardens' tutors include a First Class Honours physicist, a teacher with 18 years' K–12 classroom experience and B.Ed., an award-winning Maths dux (ATAR 97.25), multiple university-level STEM mentors, a maths tutor for SACE and IB students, seasoned peer coaches, and specialists in English, speech pathology, coding, and science competitions.

Peter
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Peter

Info Processing Tutor Joslin, SA
Listen and give encouragement/positive feedback, while addressing weaknesses. Identifying where someone is going wrong and explaining this in a friendly and respectful manner. Explaining why things are done and why they are done in a certain way/order. Patience. Knowledge. The ability to explain ideas/concepts in simpler, different and relevant…
Angelika Amor
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Angelika Amor

Info Processing Tutor Walkley Heights, SA
Be patient with them when they're learning. Allow themselves to be open to questions and concerns the student may have, but most of all, support them with their studies. I am very: understanding, empathetic, patient and willing to go about different ways in order for the student to fully grasp the content. I know students learn in a variety of…
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Samuel
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Samuel

Info Processing Tutor Firle, SA
Help him to develop - confidence and skills to learn new concepts and solve problems on his own. - appropriate background knowledge for future studies. I also encourage students letting them know when they have taken a step forward I think that my friendly temperament and patience have always helped me in my approach to students of all ages…
Natasha
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Natasha

Info Processing Tutor Trinity Gardens, SA
The most important thing is for a tutor to understand the student and listen to them. They need to accomodate to what the student thinks they need work on, but a tutor should also offer suggestions as well as motivate their student, encouraging them and helping them to be the best they can be. My strengths would be that I am a good motivator and I…
Alex
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Alex

Info Processing Tutor Norwood, SA
I consider the two most important things for a tutor to do are to first inspire confidence in the student and identify the area of difficulty as precisely as possible. Students are generally not equipped to identify the precise area of their difficulty as they don't have the knowledge to fully place it in the context of the subject. By…
Dang
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Dang

Info Processing Tutor Pooraka, SA
Confidence and great achievements are the most important things a tutor can do for a student. Students can do anything in their best if they are confident in themselves. Achievements just naturally come with their efforts and passions. I am a friendly, patient, flexible, agile, and thoughtful person. I have great academic achievements and…
Joshua
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Joshua

Info Processing Tutor North Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is creating lesson plans and methods based around that student. The tutor should also never make a student feel dumb or less capable, but instead should show the students that they have the same capabilities as their peers, it may just take other methods, and concepts that they are not getting…
Kavya
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Kavya

Info Processing Tutor Ingle Farm, SA
A tutor should not be someone who forces children to study. He or she should be a good friend, mentor for every child. He or she should be able to show patience and empathy to her students and stand with them in achieving their dreams. As a tutor, my major strengths are good communication skills and patience. I strongly want my students to…
Hrishikesh
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Hrishikesh

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
Being a role model they can look up to by understanding their perspective of the concept and making them feel heard is what I consider the most important thing a tutor can do for a student. Ability to relate with the students, form a connection and provide a unique explanation based on their…
Arjun
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Arjun

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
I believe patience and empathy toward students who are struggling is one of the most important factors while being a tutor. I also posses organisational and planning skills so that I can structure lessons and prepare for sessions effectively so that all sessions are optimised. Adaptation to a student’s learning pace is also very crucial as each…
Simranjeet Singh
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Simranjeet Singh

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
Being a tutor, one can do a lot of things for a student apart from teaching. A tutor has the responsibility of mentoring the students in career and general life. The tutor should be empathetic and able to understand the student to provide relevant support. I am a high achiever myself. Being a uni student, I can relate to the students' problems in…
Pankaj
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Pankaj

Info Processing Tutor Frewville, SA
To understand the weakness of the student and to address it with corrective action to motivate him to perform with more confidence and subject expertise while taking away the student's fear or anxiety that may come up with studies. Patience, perseverance, good listener, excellent mentoring skills, content management skills, ability to adapt to the…
Henryl
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Henryl

Info Processing Tutor Linden Park, SA
Make sure they understand the concepts first. Be patient as some students may take a while to understand few things. Try to give real life examples which will help them understand the concept easily. Im patient and im able to understand the student. All the students have different grasping power level. Understand it and helping students understand…
Jan
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Jan

Info Processing Tutor Woodville West, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is practicing patience and empathy, and providing positive reinforcement to encourage continuous improvement. I believe that my greatest strengths lie in my patience and empathy. By being patient, I can provide the necessary support and encouragement needed to help students grasp challenging…
KwaiLing
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KwaiLing

Info Processing Tutor Woodville, SA
Other than just teaching the book knowledge, tutor can educate the students( not just make them literate) which normally we don't get from books. Care and support, understanding( not too strict nor too lenient)which the students need in their academic life, making them realise that some one is always there anytime they need. 1) I know multiple…

Local Reviews

My son Adam is very comfortable working with Tom. They are still a work in progress as they have only had a couple of sessions. Adams first assignment with Tom, We had an excellent result. Adam is a high functioning Autistic he struggles with comprehension & Tom gets it. 5 Stars
Nahida, Manningham

Inside Hampstead GardensTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Bianca worked through fractions and multiplication, as well as practice with addition and subtraction worksheets to boost number fluency.

In Year 11, Isabelle focused on mastering differential calculus concepts like the chain rule and applications of optimisation, followed by detailed integration work using her Haese textbook.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Petra tackled probability density functions and normal distribution questions before revising continuous random variables for an upcoming assessment.

Recent Challenges

A Year 12 student hesitated to bring school work for review, which limited targeted support—"student needs to bring school work so I can see where she is at at school."

In a Year 11 calculus session, lack of prior revision meant foundational doubts resurfaced when tackling derivatives.

For a Year 8 algebra topic, messy written steps led to repeated small calculation errors; time was spent retracing these instead of progressing.

Meanwhile, in Year 3 maths, incomplete homework and avoidance of new multiplication techniques left confidence shaky when moving beyond familiar tables. This reluctance lingered during group reviews and slowed progress on harder word problems.

Recent Achievements

One Hampstead Gardens tutor noticed Isabelle now attempts new maths questions on her own without prompting—a shift from previously waiting for step-by-step guidance.

In senior sessions, another student recently solved complex exponential exercises mostly independently, where he'd previously needed help with each example.

Meanwhile, in a Year 4 session, Bianca—who once relied heavily on visual aids—managed to understand and solve division problems just by thinking them through this week.

Isabelle wrapped up her latest lesson by completing all set questions solo for the first time.

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