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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Highton include a university lecturer and seasoned engineer with years of maths and science teaching, VCE duxes, ATAR 97.8–98.95 achievers, an international Vice Chancellor's scholar, specialist maths awardees, experienced youth coaches and mentors, and dedicated tutors with backgrounds in peer-assisted learning, leadership, and academic excellence across STEM and English.

Jack
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Jack

Info Processing Tutor Hamlyn Heights, VIC
A tutor needs to analyse and understand the way a specific student learns, and cater for that. While a tutors ability to explain a problem is important, I believe the ability to explain a problem in a variety of different ways, while also showing a student that needing help with school is completely normal, is of upmost importance. I understand…
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Ayush

Info Processing Tutor Bell Park, VIC
To listen, and understand why a student isn't understanding a topic. Everyone is different, and tutors need to be able to adapt to everyone's own needs, and be able to find creative ways to teach them in ways they will actually learn. It is also important to ensure students go back to previous topics after learning them, to ensure long-term…
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Local Reviews

Jana is a terrific fit for my Year 5 daughter. Thank you for your help so far Jana! Jana is patient, friendly, approachable, adaptable in her style and is able to explain concepts clearly. My daughter looks forward to her visit and is becoming more confident talking about the areas she finds tricky, and is working on strategies to help her understanding of key concepts.
Melanie Powell

Inside HightonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Lily focused on comparing and ordering fractions with common denominators and practiced converting between millimetres and centimetres using a unit conversion table.

Year 10 student Zoe worked through solving simultaneous equations by both substitution and elimination methods, using step-by-step written solutions to build confidence.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Alex tackled calculus skills including applying the chain rule for differentiation and finding the equation of a tangent line from past exam questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, one student regularly forgot to bring her calculator and books home, which meant class progress couldn't be checked fully—"needs to remember her calculator" was a repeated note.

For a Year 10 English task, the habit of choosing only familiar literary devices limited the range of analysis attempted.

At the senior level (Year 12 Specialist Maths), skipping steps in anti-differentiation—especially with fractions or negative signs—meant correct answers were sometimes lost: "sometimes skips a step or goes too quickly."

During exam practice, another Year 11 struggled to underline key information in wordy questions, missing crucial details as a result.

Recent Achievements

A Highton tutor noticed one Year 11 student who used to get stuck on anti-differentiation now confidently solves problems involving trigonometric functions, rarely making mistakes and even expanding longer equations without prompting.

Another high schooler who previously hesitated to tackle difficult algebra questions now independently requests harder ones, showing real initiative during sessions.

In primary years, a Year 5 student who once struggled to complete maths work on her own has started simplifying complex ratio questions herself and no longer feels intimidated by large numbers—she recently found creative solutions in algebra without needing hints.

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