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Tutors in Isaacs include an ATAR 99.40 graduate and national chemistry champion, a maths competition high-distinction recipient with peer tutoring experience, a seasoned K–12 English and IELTS instructor, an engineer who privately tutored mathematics for years, a university-level science mentor, and several youth coaches and subject specialists passionate about guiding students.

Emily
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Emily

Business Studies Tutor Canberra, ACT
Make them feel confident in their ability and understanding My communication skills and adaptive ability, so that I can best teach them the way they…
Amogh
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Amogh

Business Studies Tutor Canberra, ACT
The biggest part of tutoring is adjusting to the various communication styles of each student, when students rely on visuals to understand a topic, the tutor needs to present graphs or sketches to exemplify formulas in a more visual manner when students prefer to learn using examples the topic needs to be translated into more tangible manners.…
1st Lesson Trial

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Vijay Narayanan
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Vijay Narayanan

Business Studies Tutor Canberra, ACT
I see no student a failure, and I will take their failure as my own. The most quintessential thing any tutor can do is adapt to the student's way of thinking and guide them to success. When you help others, you grow in the process. There is no important thing a tutor can do for a student apart from working on themselves to aid the student better…
Nicholas
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Nicholas

Business Studies Tutor Acton, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to actively listen regarding what the student needs help with. This will ensure the student will get the most of his/her session. Being able to actively listening to student feedback will be vital to becoming a successful tutor. Being able to adapt to each individuals learning style as no…
ADITYA
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ADITYA

Business Studies Tutor Reid, ACT
I think the most important things a tutor can do are to build the student’s confidence, make them feel supported, and help them understand the subject in a way that makes sense to them. It's not just about getting the right answer it's about making the student feel like they can get there on their own. A good tutor listens, stays patient, and…
Wenjie
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Wenjie

Business Studies Tutor Reid, ACT
Hell them understand context and encourage them to solve problems by themselves Logical and clear…
Austin
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Austin

Business Studies Tutor Reid, ACT
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to develop their ability to learn and think independently. One of my favourite quotes is "If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime." Teaching students how to learn not only helps them to do well in their exams, but…
Heather
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Heather

Business Studies Tutor Conder, ACT
Help them gain confidence in themselves and uplifting them in the process. To do this I think its important to ensure the student is still self sufficient (not just given the answers). During my studies I balanced full time work and full time university, this taught me to have excellent time management skills and really appreciate the value of…
Sparsh
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Sparsh

Business Studies Tutor Acton, ACT
A tutor can make a student love the subject he/she hates. The most important thing for a tutor is to understand the student, his/her interests, aptitude, and what he/she is inclined towards. If you have a basic idea of the student mindset you can develop techniques to make them understand the subject in a way they don't find it hard. Gamification…

Local Reviews

We want to say how happy my daughter is with Greta. Greta gives her feedback and is very willing to help her, especially prior to exams. I think she is a great match and is very good with her. Thank you and we definitely recommend Greta as a maths tutor.
Anna

Inside IsaacsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Alex worked on addition using coins to connect maths with real-life situations and practiced mental strategies for adding without physical objects.

In Year 8, Jamie focused on collecting like terms and simplifying algebraic expressions, as well as subtracting into negative numbers using number lines for clarity.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Emily tackled probability with two-way tables and tree diagrams, then converted fractions to decimals through worked examples.

Recent Challenges

A Year 7 student's homework on linear equations was mostly incorrect, yet when working together in the lesson, solutions were clear and accurate—highlighting a reliance on immediate feedback rather than independent checking.

In Year 11, one student struggled to backcheck hyperbola questions and often left their written work unstructured, which made it hard to spot calculation errors ("needs to format her questions and answers a little better").

Meanwhile, a primary student frequently lost focus during multiplication practice; distractions interrupted her progress just as she started gaining confidence with times tables. Each instance led to time spent revisiting the same ground instead of moving forward.

Recent Achievements

One Isaacs tutor noticed a Year 11 student who'd previously hesitated to speak up now working through boxplot and circle questions out loud, even tackling hyperbola intercepts without prompting.

A Year 9 student, after initially stumbling with algebra, surprised her tutor by starting to check her own work and correct mistakes mid-lesson—a big shift from waiting for help before.

Meanwhile, in primary school maths, a younger student who used to count on fingers completed a set of addition problems entirely from memory and under a timer, then went back to fix his own errors without any prompting.

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