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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Hidden Valley's tutors include a St Paul Rondo Library K–12 homework mentor and Cum Laude biology graduate, an ATAR 99 achiever with selective school teaching experience, a published mathematician-statistician, experienced music and peer mentors, Sydney Boys High's English dux and debating leader, university-trained engineers, and volunteers skilled in supporting diverse learners.

Amelie
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Amelie

Tutor Wagaman, NT
A tutor should be patient and never say something is easy. They should always encourage and find ways to explain something step-by-step such that everything is explained and can be linked back to a central idea. I am patient, friendly, and I can see and understand why something can be difficult to understand. I encourage and can relate to finding…
Pal
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Pal

Tutor Jingili, NT
One of the most important things a tutor can do is understand a students potential and pushing them to do to their best. I think I would be a good strict tutor who would push people to do their best. To me, the best tutoring style is one that caters to the specific student in their best learning…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

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David
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David

Tutor Darwin, NT
I feel the most important thing that a tutor can do is to listen to the students as they explain what they don't understand and to help fully explain the solution of the problem to the student and to verify that the students understands the new concepts. I am patient with the students and I can work through many examples with the student until he…
Jesse
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Jesse

Tutor Casuarina, NT
From my experience with tutors, I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student are. Recognising someone's improvements, recalling how a student has overcome a challenge in the past can be a great motivator for the present as well as build self-confidence. Being a role model, students will be influenced by a tutor's method of…
Nripan
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Nripan

Tutor Casuarina, NT
I believe one of the most important thing would be to build a student's confidence, teaching them to feel positive about themselves. Perhaps the student feels incapable of solving problems,despite possessing the ability. Thus, it is a tutor's duty to show students that they are capable and believe in themselves. It is also important that the…

Local Reviews

Xinyi enjoyed her lesson and felt she made a lot of progress. Xinyi said James could quickly identify what she didn't know even before she could understand where she was deficient. We are VERY HAPPY!
Matilda

Inside Hidden ValleyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Elise practised adding and subtracting mixed fractions with different denominators and worked through a reading comprehension worksheet discussing possible answers.

In Year 9, Amelie tackled simultaneous linear equations and problems involving parallel and perpendicular lines, using targeted worksheets to build confidence.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Michael focused on trigonometric functions and the unit circle, exploring how these are used to determine exact values for test preparation.

Recent Challenges

A Year 6 student frequently arrived at lessons without homework completed, as noted: "we too often lose a lot of time during the lesson finishing work that should have already been completed." This unfinished work meant less time for new content and practice.

In Year 10 mathematics, one student's messy, scattered working made it hard to track errors or review steps later; as described, "both of us struggled to understand it," especially when revising linear modeling problems.

Meanwhile, in senior maths, an over-reliance on calculators was evident—answers were entered before outlining the process, which led to missed marks for incorrect units or incomplete reasoning in exam settings.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Hidden Valley noticed Amelie taking the initiative to identify and correct her own test errors—something she hesitated to do before.

Elise, now tackling Grade 6 material despite past struggles with fractions, has begun outlining every step out loud rather than just guessing silently.

Meanwhile, Aymen (Year 10) recently broke down composite shapes independently during a perimeter task—last term he relied heavily on prompts for this. In his last assessment, he scored 46 out of 55 after consistently practicing these strategies.

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 Karama Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Australian International Islamic College Darwin.