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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Ironbark include a Monash Dean's Honour List mathematician and seasoned exam coach, experienced youth mentors and camp leaders, current Bachelor of Education students with extensive classroom placements, high-ATAR achievers with subject awards, psychology graduates skilled in special needs support, plus Olympiad competitors and peer tutors passionate about inspiring young learners.

Mac Thuy Duong
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Mac Thuy Duong

Tutor Brassall, QLD
Being supportive and bonding with students while keeping the needed formality are essential. This makes students more comfortable expressing their opinions and feelings during study sessions. Thus, tutors can cater the class more to their needs and accelerate their progress. I am confident in my communication skills. I have a long history of…
Avdiy
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Avdiy

Tutor Leichhardt, QLD
Help them grow and achieve a greater fundamental understanding, while also equipping them with the best practices and methods, especially in areas they are lacking I can understand many different people's way of thinking. I know which questions to ask to determine where in the process they have a block on their…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Terena
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Terena

Tutor North Ipswich, QLD
I believe that tutoring for a student should be a safe zone space where they can make mistakes. Tutoring does not have the same pressue for a student that school can, as such it is important for a tutor to be patient and adaptive when a student is struggling with a concept. A tutor should welcome mistakes as an opportunity to grow. I also believe…
Jake
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Jake

Tutor Blacksoil, QLD
1. Maintain a Supportive Environment Supportive environments for students, when learning new skills/strategies, need to be maintained in order for the student to reach their goals. 2. Showing the Student Respect As a tutor, you need to gain the students' respect through a range of ways, for example, giving them the chance to learn new skills…
Dan
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Dan

Tutor Pine Mountain, QLD
Inspire them to enjoy the work. They will be with you for a fraction of their actual study time. If you can inspire them to enjoy the work, they will work hard in and out of session. Wealth of knowledge Adaptable communication engaging personality Invested in those I…
Timothy
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Timothy

Tutor Pine Mountain, QLD
As above, affirming their limitations JUST AS MUCH as their strengths - affirm, affirm, affirm! I believe the most fundamental truth is found in admitting and celebrating weakness. I would prioritise my strengths as: - enthusiasm - pedantic attention to detail - strong synthesising skills and understanding across a wide range of…
Danielle
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Danielle

Tutor Pine Mountain, QLD
Build their confidence. Listen to the students and their needs Patience. Ability to teach in a way that will benefit…
Paul
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Paul

Tutor Brassall, QLD
To teach them to think intensively and critically so that they can learn independently in the future. In year 11 I was tutored in mathematics and so I understand the difficulty in learning new and unfamiliar topics. That experience will allow me to relate to the person I am tutoring, which will create a better learning experience for the…
Aiden
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Aiden

Tutor Brassall, QLD
The most important thing is for a tutor to inspire the student to put in their maximum effort. I believe identifying strengths and weaknesses would be one of my strong…
Kai
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Kai

Tutor Brassall, QLD
I believe that the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to relieve stress and to confirm to the student that their understanding of concepts is correct. By this i mean in my personal experience a lot of what i needed from my own tutors was for them to confirm that what i thought was correct was or not. I believe my strengths also…
chelsea
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chelsea

Tutor North Ipswich, QLD
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to set up reachable and positive expectations for individual students. No two students learn the same, so it is important to cater for the individuals learning needs whether they need concrete materials, whiteboards, etc. As I am still relatively young, and work in a low socio…
Alex
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Alex

Tutor Coalfalls, QLD
The learning space is the most impactful factor for a student's capacity to learn. If they don't feel safe or they don't feel encouraged, they can lose interest and/or disengage. Maintaining this space is the most important thing a tutor or teacher can do for their students. This takes the form of a number of things; the words and tone of voice…
Madison
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Madison

Tutor Leichhardt, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to increase understanding of the subject and inspire their interest to further pursue their studies in their own time. My greatest strength as is tutor my patience. I understand that every student has different strengths and some will require more time than others to reach their…
Hugh
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Hugh

Tutor Leichhardt, QLD
The most important thing is approaching the task not simply as a series of questions to be answered, but instead as a dive into the nature of what is being learned and its applications to the world, which fosters a much greater depth of understanding and encourages curiosity above all else. I do not have a standard technique for learning that…

Local Reviews

Maham is a great tutor and an excellent fit with Emily. She explains concepts to Emily very clearly. We have seen improvement in both Emily's results and confidence.
Karen

Inside IronbarkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 9 student Cale worked on writing a monologue for his English exam and revised algebraic concepts such as index laws and expanding expressions, also spending time strengthening maths skills for upcoming assessments.

Another Year 9 student focused on interpreting bivariate data and distinguishing dependent from independent variables in class investigations, as well as developing problem-solving strategies.

Meanwhile, Year 7 student Emily practised adding and subtracting decimals using different calculation methods to find her preferred approach, and explored fraction operations to build confidence with number work.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student lost his maths assignment due to computer saving issues, which had a direct impact on his grade; as the tutor noted, "we will need to change the way he has been saving his documents."

In senior maths (Year 11), another student often forgot formulas and missed units of measurement when tackling worded problems—especially when questions were phrased differently.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 learner's revision was limited by incomplete note-taking: she struggled to summarize lessons without prompts, leaving gaps in her understanding.

Each scenario left students feeling frustrated or unsure during assessments.

Recent Achievements

One Ironbark tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 11 student who, after initially losing nearly all marks on a mock test due to confusion between operations, now independently reviews her mistakes and has begun to solve algebra problems with less prompting.

In another session, a high schooler who used to avoid asking for help now initiates discussions about topics he's struggling with before falling behind.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student quickly picked up decimal addition and was eager to attempt new problems solo—a change from earlier sessions where she waited for step-by-step guidance.

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 Ipswich Libraries—or at your child's school (with permission), like Haigslea State School.