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Private physics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Invermay's tutors include a seasoned primary teacher and curriculum innovator, a maths specialist with six years' experience across grades 1–10, a learning support officer and private tutor with education credentials, VCE subject duxes and high ATAR achievers, peer mentors, youth coaches, Girl Guides leaders, and academic award recipients spanning STEM to the creative arts.

Isaac
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Isaac

Physics Tutor Eureka, VIC
The most important things a physics tutor can do for a student is provide the with the strategies, tools, and perhaps most importantly: confidence they need to succeed and thrive in their studies. I believe my strengths include my ability to effectively communicate and teach important concepts and skills to my students. In particular I pride…
Merjema
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Merjema

Physics Tutor Mount Clear, VIC
A tutor can offer a relaxing atmosphere for students, with no pressure, so students can have a better understanding of the tasks asked to be solved. working one on one give better results and more inclusion of student being tutored. My strength as a tutor is that I have an excellent ability to explain tasks and I am able to simplify things very…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Physics

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Local Reviews

Leon is extremely happy with Harrison's classes and how much effort Harrison puts into preparing and feedback for Leon. Harrison is also very prompt in replying to Leons texts and goes out of his way to make time for a lesson. Leon feels his maths has improved a lot since Harrison has been tutoring him and whilst it's not his strongest subject he feels he is in a much better place heading towards final exams.
Louise

Inside InvermayTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Greta revised negative numbers and algebraic expansion, practiced translating French food vocabulary into simple sentences, and interpreted themes in poetry.

Year 8 student Zara focused on trigonometry, including labelling sides of right-angled triangles, writing trig ratios (sin, cos, tan), and rearranging equations to solve for unknowns using a calculator.

For Year 11, Emily worked through logical proofs such as proof by contradiction and mathematical induction to strengthen her understanding of advanced problem-solving methods.

Recent Challenges

In Year 4 maths, a student often skipped double-checking answers on fraction and division tasks, leading to small errors and lower confidence—one tutor noted, "she jumped to addition when the question was subtraction."

In Year 11 specialist maths, confusion over when to apply the cosine rule appeared: using it without confirming if the angle was between two known sides.

Messy or incomplete working in algebraic surd rationalisation made error-spotting difficult for a Year 12 student; steps were missed or jumbled.

During essay writing in English (Year 8), reluctance to express ideas in writing meant creative thoughts stayed unshared, limiting feedback opportunities.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Invermay recently noticed a Year 10 student who had previously struggled to explain her maths thinking begin requesting specific topics—like powers—and openly communicating when she understood or was stuck, showing a big shift from guessing quietly.

In another session, a Year 11 student who once hesitated with exponent laws started solving equations independently presented in unusual ways without prompting and even tackled the base case of induction independently.

Meanwhile, during a primary session, one younger learner went from making frequent errors with array-based fractions to confidently grouping and identifying equivalent fractions by counting dots instead of relying on guesswork.

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