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Tutors in Hebersham include a PhD mathematician and published university professor, a secondary maths teacher with years of classroom experience, a primary school specialist dedicated to inclusive education, an HSC Extension II high achiever and school captain, accomplished peer mentors, and several educators with postgraduate degrees and national academic awards.

Samin
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Samin

Economics Tutor Doonside, NSW
Providing adequate feedback is the most important trait of a tutor. A tutor must identify key areas of weakness especially for maths. They must also show a method that can be replicated to produce the best results. I am very good at using visual aids to demonstrate new concepts to the students. I am great at boosting the student's confidence as I…
Saloni
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Saloni

Economics Tutor Bungarribee, NSW
Being a tutor is a very demanding position to be in as it becomes your responsibility to not only deliver the content but to make sure that it gets through to the student. The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be able to build a trust relationship so that the student feels comfortable asking if they do not understand instead…
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Aiceline
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Aiceline

Economics Tutor Woodcroft, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help them fully understand the subject and its topics. Once a student properly understands the contents then they can successfully apply the right information to the questions. I can explain a concept or topic in different ways and perspective. This is important as students are very…
Mehakbir
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Mehakbir

Economics Tutor Schofields, NSW
A tutor's role goes beyond just imparting knowledge. They should build confidence and self-belief, create a personalized and supportive learning environment, and encourage active learning and critical thinking. Clear explanations, achievable goals, and constructive feedback are essential. A tutor should also foster independence, provide guidance…
Ashton
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Ashton

Economics Tutor Blacktown, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is mentor and guide. I believe tutors help out students to not only learn content but help them realize the real world and practical value of what is learn t being able to help them apply such skills in their education and further career. As a tutor, my core strengths include being timely,…
Vedika
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Vedika

Economics Tutor Acacia Gardens, NSW
Personally, I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to listen to your students to ensure they can achieve growth, confidence and independence, adjust teaching strategies which best benefit the student, and build a good teacher-student relationship to allow the student to feel comfortable and express concerns. My…
Nikita
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Nikita

Economics Tutor Glenwood, NSW
The most important goal as a teacher is to be able to share your knowledge and and encourage students to extend their own personal limits, set goals and achieve their best potential while creating a challenging, positive and encouraging learning environment. I became a mentor for disadvantaged students to motivate and assist these students to set…
Rabiba
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Rabiba

Economics Tutor Kings Langley, NSW
A tutor's main focus should be on helping the student improve their abilities and assisting them in overcoming their weaknesses. Good communication and a good understanding are essential aspects in ensuring a tutor is able to focus on the student's weaknesses and help them improve in the areas they most need to work on. Most importantly, a tutor…
Brock
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Brock

Economics Tutor Kingswood, NSW
Able to provide extra teaching in a positive manner that encourages the student to learn and not to downgrade them because of their failure to understand I am often commended on my ability to create a positive environment by teachers and peers, so a strength of mine would definitely be the ability to encourage a student to do their best, opening…

Local Reviews

Rahul and Emil clicked really well together and they work very well together. Emil is an amazing tutor, it started off really well. So far we rate him 10/10.
Devina

Inside HebershamTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 Omar revised non-linear equations for an upcoming maths exam using targeted worksheets and also analysed scenes from "Pleasantville" to plan a discursive English essay.

Year 9 students focused on surds and indices, with one working on converting between index and surd forms as well as simplifying surds, while another practiced expanding brackets containing surds and rationalising denominators.

For Year 3 Sidney, lessons centred around counting forwards and backwards from any three-digit number, using place value models, and arranging numbers in ascending order through hands-on activities.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, "he keeps losing his book," making it difficult to track progress and leading to gaps in revision.

Messy or incomplete written work was common in both Year 7 and Year 9: as one tutor observed, "Book work needs to be neater and working out needs to be shown."

In a Year 4 session, skipping instructions (such as confusing the hour and minute hands) happened when focus drifted toward finishing quickly.

For a senior student tackling surds, over-reliance on familiar types left harder problems unattempted—meaning those remained stumbling blocks by test time.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Hebersham noticed a real shift with one Year 9 student who, after weeks of hesitating, now routinely asks for clarification when he's unsure instead of just skipping problems—especially during algebra sessions.

Another high school student recently started completing surds and indices questions much faster, even choosing to tackle bracket expansion without prompting, which was something she'd struggled to attempt independently last term.

Meanwhile, in Year 3, Sidney quickly picked up counting by decades and fives without her usual reliance on the number chart; by the end of the lesson, she finished a whole worksheet unaided.

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 Mt Druitt Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Hebersham Public School.