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Private online tutors that come to you in person or online

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Harlaxton's tutors include a seasoned English coach and competition winner with over 15 years' teaching experience, a Bachelor of Education-trained volleyball coach and school teacher, an award-winning PhD scientist, a certified TESOL mentor with K–12 expertise, university peer mentors, and high-achieving maths specialists—offering students deep subject knowledge alongside real classroom and coaching backgrounds.

Alina
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Alina

Online Tutor Kearneys Spring, QLD
I believe the biggest thing a tutor can do is show the student how to study, meaning how to break down concepts and how to analyze. That way you will always have the tools should you decide to learn something later on in life. I believe I am very patient and take my time to explain things to students. I also like for them to take their time to…

Local Reviews

I have had feedback from our daughters teachers and just her attitude alone has improved which means her confidence is increasing since Avdiy has been helping her out.
Wendy

Inside HarlaxtonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 11 student Tom focused on integration techniques and tackling area under curve questions from worksheets.

For Year 12, Sam worked through balancing redox reactions in Chemistry and explored proof by induction in Specialist Maths, using QCAA examples for clarity.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Bonnie practised calculations of compound areas—including triangles and trapezoids—and solved a range of area problems to build confidence with geometry basics.

Recent Challenges

Repeated Zoom sound issues for a Year 11 student led to missed instructions and gaps when clarifying log manipulations in chemistry.

He needed guidance on assignment structure, as this was his first for the subject; using marking guides and teacher resources was essential.

In Year 7 maths, homework was left incomplete several times—when asked about missing tasks, the response showed a need for better organisation and study routines.

A Year 4 student struggled to focus during lessons and avoided practising multiplication tables at home; distraction made it difficult to build strong basics before moving ahead.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Harlaxton recently noticed a Year 12 student who, after previously struggling with mathematical induction examples, managed to work through trickier questions independently and even modified his answers when the data didn't match expectations.

Another high school student has become more systematic in laying out responses for networking and optimisation problems—an improvement from earlier sessions where his working was scattered and hard to follow.

Among younger students, one primary learner is now consistently completing homework before lessons and talks through algebra steps out loud instead of staying silent or guessing.

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 Highfields Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Downlands College.