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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Ingleside's tutors include a seasoned primary school teacher with extensive classroom and curriculum expertise, an Australian Maths Olympiad medallist, university-level peer mentors in maths and physics, a private tutor ranked first in HSC Extension 2 Mathematics, award-winning science graduates, state-level sports coaches, and accomplished musicians skilled in mentoring younger students.

Sophie
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Sophie

Tutor Beacon Hill, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to support them without judgement. Whether that support comes in smaller forms of teaching students concepts they may struggle with or encouraging students to not give up. As a tutor I think my greatest strengths are bringing in a passion and enjoyment for the subjects I tutor and…
Helga
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Helga

Tutor Narraweena, NSW
Having both been the tutee and the tutor, I believe that it is imperative that a tutor is supportive of the student and caters their teaching to the student's specific needs. Tutoring is only truly effective when the student is completely engaged with the tutor and I believe that this can only happen when the student believes that they are in an…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Daniel
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Daniel

Tutor St Ives, NSW
I consider the transference of inspiration to the student to be the most important and fulfilling thing a tutor can achieve. From inspiration births a work ethic, an attitude and an independence within the student that carries through their whole life. I believe that as an individual, you are your own CEO, CMO, CFO etc. As such, by teaching the…
Ian
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Ian

Tutor Forestville, NSW
A great tutor should focus on building a student's confidence for learning by fostering understanding, critical thinking, and a safe environment for growth. By clarifying concepts and questions carefully step-by-step, tutors make learning approachable. Positive reinforcement for progress while setting and tracking achievable goals offers clear…
Archie
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Archie

Tutor Warriewood, NSW
I believe the most important aspect of tutoring is targeting a student's goal in a subject, whether that be just passing or scoring 100%, and teaching them at that level, whilst providing that extra push to potentially help them succeed above these goals. In doing so, I believe this allows students to engage more with the work and see strong…
Georgette
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Georgette

Tutor Narrabeen, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for their student is be patient and to never give up on the student. I am patient and am not easy to frustrate. I am also able to communicate concepts in a number of ways until a student is able to understand the…
Jade
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Jade

Tutor Newport, NSW
Above tutoring a student, I believe a tutor should be a role model; They should inspire a love for learning. Furthermore, the tutor should build a relationship to build trust so that the lessons don't seem forced and uncomfortable. I am organised, passionate, kind, caring, patient, friendly, personable, honest, reliable, hard-working and…
Daniel
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Daniel

Tutor Forestville, NSW
I think a tutor should be capable of answering any questions discussing any uncertainties that a student may have. These should be explained clearly and if the student does not understand initially, the tutor should continue to explain in alternate ways (e.g. rewording sentences and visual aids such as diagrams) until the student understands. In…
Jason
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Jason

Tutor Forestville, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to establish their confidence, give them the attention, teach the most efficient strategies to succeed in the exam with the least lessons. Students can't succeed in their exam is because there are so-called 'good students' in their class, for multiple reasons, their teachers don't actually…

Local Reviews

Tejas is amazing. He is so innovative and creative in how he explains math concepts. He had Harper running outside tonight to get a leaf so he could demonstrate some learning to him. He also has really tried to get to know Harper and in is genuinely interested in him. We have used several tutor for both my sons schooling, but never quite met anyone as passionate and patient as Tejas.
Danielle

Inside InglesideTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Maya worked on finding areas of special quadrilaterals and practiced converting between different measurement units.

For Year 9, Jake focused on solving trigonometry problems involving side ratios and angle identification, as well as applying Pythagoras' Theorem using diagrams for clarity.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Liam tackled compound interest calculations and revised interpreting cumulative frequency polygons in statistics.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student's tendency to skip writing working in algebra led to sign errors and confusion, as one tutor noted: "he forgot the negative sign in scientific notation, which changed the answer."

In Year 11 trigonometry, incomplete homework limited fluency with bearings and exact values—she struggled to recall which formula applied mid-question.

For a Year 7 measurement task, forgetting to write units caused marks to be lost despite correct calculations.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student hesitated to attempt harder word problems without diagrams drawn from scratch, slowing problem-solving and undermining confidence when unfamiliar layouts appeared on tests.

Recent Achievements

One Ingleside tutor noted Alice's shift in high school maths: she now talks through tricky trigonometry questions out loud and chooses the correct ratio on her own, a change from earlier sessions when she'd freeze at unfamiliar problems.

In Year 8, Genevieve recently began using multiple methods to solve algebraic equations—whereas before, she would stick rigidly to one approach even if it wasn't working.

Meanwhile, Ray (Year 8) used to get stuck on unit conversions during tests but, after targeted revision, completed nearly an entire practice test independently and only needed minor reminders for two questions.

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 Terrey Hills Community Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Galstaun College.