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Tutors in Hocking include a primary school teacher with international experience and first-class honours, a Kumon assistant instructor awarded for Specialist Mathematics, a Montessori educator and English department head, an ATAR 99 achiever in maths and science, university-qualified STEM specialists, experienced education assistants, and dedicated mentors for K–12 students across diverse learning needs.

Cameron
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Cameron

Tutor Hocking, WA
Be prepared to listen to the students problems and adjust your teaching method such that they are able to learn the way that is more effective for them. I believe I have all the material ready to be a tutor that is prepared for the students such that no time is wasted in the tutoring session to read over old material. I also believe that I can…
Kamnee
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Kamnee

Tutor Ashby, WA
Most important thing would be to know what the goal of the student is and help them and support them in achieving their goal in a friendly environment. A tutor should be able to offer many different explanations so that the student has a better chance of understanding a particular concept. Most important is to make the student feel at ease and be…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

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Luke
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Luke

Tutor Connolly, WA
I believe to explain a concept that the student can understand is paramount in the role of a tutor. For this to be done the student needs to comprehend the simple skills that leads up to the final difficult concept. If a tutor is able to explain this complex concept by explaining the simple skills and breaking down the concept in a simpler method,…
Thien Huy
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Thien Huy

Tutor Marangaroo, WA
For maths, I think the most important thing for students is to understand the concepts rather than just knowing the formula themselves. It really helps build the foundation to solve maths problems, especially in maths specialists which requires critical thinking. I feel like being their friend when I help them, so it doesn't make them feel…
Brooke
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Brooke

Tutor Padbury, WA
I believe encouragement is the most important thing a tutor can do. By focusing on what they have achieved rather then what they haven't, the children can gain a sense of self worth and achievement, making them more likely to want to learn more. By always being there to support them through difficult content, a tutor can develop trust with the…
Laura
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Laura

Tutor Sinagra, WA
Actively listening to the student and what they want to achieve. Being empathetic to the student and if a particular strategy isn't working, then tackling it from a different angle until together the tutor and student find what works best for the student and their style of learning. I am intuitive, empathetic and an excellent listener. I myself…
Mansi
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Mansi

Tutor Darch, WA
Not only identify potential errors made by the student but also shed light on how to improve them. I find this method especially effective when using personal experiences. Providing practice questions including worked solutions is also key aspect of my teaching. I personally used to struggle with maths in primary school and was able to find…
Minh
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Minh

Tutor Marangaroo, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is helping them understand the concept behind the topic they are doing. Once you fully grasp the concept it stays with you and precision and speed with the question just comes with practice. I am able to get students to understand the concept as opposed to just learning how to do the…
Justyna
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Justyna

Tutor Currambine, WA
Increase their confidence, reduce any anxiety they have about maths Provide new and interesting ways of solving problems Helping them relate what they're doing to the real world (for example, even if it is not something they will be doing in the future, learning how to reason and problem solve will always be valuable to them) Cater to different…
Yao
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Yao

Tutor Balga, WA
The most important thing as a tutor is to guide the students think positively. I was influenced by my high school maths teacher so much and even now I remember what he said to the class, "all maths is easy, none of these are hard" and "practice makes progress". The encouragement from my maths teacher motivated me to have faith on myself that I…

Local Reviews

Selena was wonderful and helped my daughter to get the marks she was after to get into her desired course this year.
Kylie

Inside HockingTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Lily worked on comparing and rounding 3- and 4-digit numbers, as well as reviewing place value grids to strengthen number sense.

In Year 9, Jayden focused on trigonometry—applying sine, cosine, and tangent ratios—and revisited Pythagoras' Theorem with practical problem-solving.

For Year 10, Ali spent the session revising quadratic equations and learning how to use her calculator for solving these equations more efficiently.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Physics, not showing working out for multi-step questions led to confusion when checking satellite motion calculations. As one tutor observed, "she remains reluctant to show her work," which made it harder to pinpoint small errors.

In Year 8 Maths, a student avoided completing homework on time and often relied heavily on notes during probability revision; this meant less independent recall and weaker problem-solving under test conditions.

Meanwhile, in Year 3, guessing answers for times tables without mental calculation caused repeated mistakes—confidence dropped each time the answer was incorrect and visible frustration followed.

Recent Achievements

One Hocking tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with quadratic equations now working through factorisation problems on her own, using the reverse tabular method and even explaining how changing each coefficient affects the parabola's shape.

Another recent high school session saw a Year 8 student go from missing key steps in probability to confidently drawing probability trees and asking clarifying questions when stuck, rather than guessing.

Meanwhile, Giovanna in Year 3 has started talking through her place value reasoning out loud—something she was too shy to attempt before—and can now accurately arrange six-digit numbers without 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 Wanneroo Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Elizabeth's Catholic Primary School.