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Higgins' tutors feature primary and secondary school teachers with years of classroom expertise, a Master's candidate in educational leadership, an ATAR 97.7 achiever with a national computing scholarship, international STEM competitors, peer mentors, and maths specialists—plus multiple postgraduate educators passionate about helping K–12 students thrive academically and personally.

Jack
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Jack

Physics Tutor Acton, ACT
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to understand and adjust to their learning style, provide clear explanations, encourage active participation, build confidence, assess progress and provide feedback, create a supportive environment, address questions and concerns, and provide additional resources. By doing these things, a…
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Kelvin

Physics Tutor Acton, ACT
Help them understanding problem, analyzing problem, and solving problem. On a larger scale, I really wanted to change students' from hating math or physics subjects to loving them I'm an organized tutor as I like to prepare a rundown before the tutoring session. I'm also an interactive tutor which I always ask and ask students if they understand…
1st Lesson Trial

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Jinan

Physics Tutor Nicholls, ACT
I really believe that the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be patient towards them and make them feel comfortable to keep asking for help again and again. I once had a tutor for Specialist Methods in Year 11. He would teach very fast and not make sure that I had fully understood the topic. He'd also get very impatient, to the…

Local Reviews

My daughter is happy with Harsimar.
Kelly

Inside HigginsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Olivia explored linear inequalities and straight line graphing, then practised finding midpoints and distances between points on the Cartesian plane.

For Year 11, Ethan focused on differentiation of exponential functions and revisited natural logarithms through worksheet questions.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Anise strengthened her skills with chain rule applications for differentiating compound functions, including tackling extension problems involving more complex algebraic manipulation.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student often hesitated to ask for help, both in tutoring and class—this quiet avoidance left gaps in understanding during geometry tasks. "He rarely voiced confusion about triangle orientation," a tutor noted, so errors lingered.

In Year 11, incomplete homework was an issue: one week, missed assignments meant less time for review of formula application, stalling progress with complex problems.

Another senior student showed reluctance to write out working in algebra, preferring mental calculation; this hid mistakes and made it hard to catch sign errors.

Confidence dips after setbacks sometimes led to avoidance rather than targeted revision.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Higgins noticed a real shift for Jensen, a high schooler who used to hesitate but now arrives with his own questions and openly asks for help—something he never did at first.

In another recent session, Callan moved beyond just following steps; he started writing his own test cheat sheet and applying index laws independently after struggling to remember them last term.

Meanwhile, Molly (Year 5) quietly surprised her tutor by finishing all her maths homework on her own during the lesson, instead of needing reminders or step-by-step prompts as before.

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 Kippax Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Kingsford Smith School.