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Heathfield's tutors include a PhD-qualified university lecturer and award-winning educator, school teachers with Masters degrees in teaching and linguistics, experienced K–12 mentors and peer coaches, accomplished music instructors, maths Olympiad participants, academic prize-winners with ATARs above 97, and passionate specialists in languages, sciences, creative arts, debating, and STEM.

Olivia
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Olivia

Economics Tutor Stirling, SA
I believe the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is be able to teach them skills that they can use in their studies after they are finished with a tutor. Obviously it is a tutors job to teach them the task at hand, but I believe a great tutor is able to teach the student skills that will allow them to do better in school…
Omer
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Omer

Economics Tutor Glen Osmond, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are clarify difficult concepts, build confidence, and encourage independent thinking. A tutor should not just provide answers but help students develop a deeper understanding of the subject by guiding them through problems and encouraging critical thinking. Equally important is creating a…
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Local Reviews

Jack is great and Lily is enjoying tutoring so far.
Cindie, Crafers

Inside HeathfieldTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Oliver worked on multiplication and division skills as well as tackling time questions using word problems.

For Year 9, Ethan focused on factorisation of polynomials and practiced graphing equations by hand to reinforce algebraic understanding.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sophie revised logarithms for an upcoming test and reviewed methods for rearranging algebraic expressions, emphasising accuracy under timed conditions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student in Heathfield often skipped showing full working for algebra, which made it difficult to spot and fix sign errors—he skipped steps in algebra, which hid sign errors.

Meanwhile, a Year 12 student preparing for physics tests hadn't completed enough revision between sessions; this led to uncertainty when choosing equations during circular motion problems.

In Year 8, another learner's tendency to rush through worded maths questions resulted in frequent misinterpretations of what was actually being asked. These habits meant time was lost untangling misunderstandings rather than building confidence with new content.

Recent Achievements

A Heathfield tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to lose marks for small algebra slips is now catching these mistakes before submitting practice tests, double-checking his work rather than rushing through.

In Year 9 maths, another student—who previously stayed quiet when confused—has started explaining her thinking out loud during problem-solving, which has helped clarify tricky division steps she'd often skip over in silence before.

A younger primary student was initially hesitant with time problems but now confidently tells the tutor whether to add or subtract minutes and finishes all set questions without needing prompts.

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