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Tutors in Kearns include a UK-qualified Humanities teacher with eight years' experience, peer mentoring leaders and school Vice Captains, accomplished high school maths extension graduates, a National Maths Competition distinction recipient, an ATAR 96.8 scorer, experienced youth mentors and NAPLAN coaches, plus tutors with university studies in science, engineering and linguistics.

Daneo
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Daneo

Economics Tutor Bardia, NSW
The most crucial things a tutor can do, in my opinion, are boost students' self-esteem, provide clear explanations, and establish a welcoming environment where they feel free to ask questions. To assist students get better over time, a tutor should help them comprehend the material and form better study habits. My patience, my ability to…
Nicholas
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Nicholas

Economics Tutor Macquarie Fields, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel more confident and comfortable with a subject. I believe this to be true as being more confident and comfortable with subjects often leads to more voluntary studying out of passion, and subsequently a deeper grasp of the content themselves. As a tutor, my strengths are the…
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Sahil
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Sahil

Economics Tutor Macquarie Fields, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do is provide regular feedback to the student, in order to help identify mistakes and improve their understanding. Providing feedback regularly allows for faster development and makes it easier for the student to understand difficult concepts. My strengths include being enthusiastic while teaching hence…
Timothy
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Timothy

Economics Tutor Macquarie Fields, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for the student are ensuring that the student is able to achieve their highest potential in the certain subject, teach them important skills that they can use throughout life and form long lasting relationships with the student. Furthermore, the tutor must continually support the student and ensure the…
Hamid
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Hamid

Economics Tutor Austral, NSW
A great tutor does more than explain content — they build confidence. The most important things a tutor can do are listen carefully, adapt to the student’s learning style, and create a safe space where questions feel welcome. Clear explanations matter, but so does patience and encouragement, especially when a student is struggling. A tutor…
Aishani
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Aishani

Economics Tutor Prestons, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for the student is believe in the student and motivate the student to learn and achieve their maximum potential. This is then followed by providing knowledge and making sure that the student understands most of the content to be able to gain maximum understanding of the topics. My strengths as a tutor is…

Local Reviews

Kevin and Patrick are working well together and Pat is growing more confident with every tutorial.
Julieanne, Eschol Park

Inside KearnsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Amelia focused on addition and subtraction strategies, as well as multiplication basics using visual aids.

For Year 8, Sam worked through linear relationships—finding equations of lines and interpreting gradients—plus some revision on surface area of composite shapes.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Grace tackled trigonometric ratios (sin, cos, tan), solving for unknown sides in right-angled triangles, and practiced applying the Pythagorean theorem to real-world scenarios.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student repeatedly mixed up the gradient and y-intercept when rearranging equations, which slowed progress in graphing tasks.

"He moved everything to one side, but only needed to move -7x to make y the subject," a tutor observed during linear algebra.

In senior physics, another student avoided referencing data directly from graphs in written answers—missing marks despite knowing the content.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 learner often forgot to show all steps for negative number operations in algebra, resulting in hidden calculation errors that took extra time to find and correct before moving forward.

Recent Achievements

A Kearns tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who'd always hesitated to ask questions during lessons now actively speaks up when stuck on complex trig problems, instead of just guessing and moving on.

Another high schooler has gone from confusing gradients and y-intercepts to independently rearranging linear equations into general form and checking their work for errors without prompting.

In primary, one younger learner who used to rush through reading tasks is now pausing and self-correcting tricky words before continuing—a big change in focus.

Last week, that same student read an entire new chapter aloud with only one prompt.

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 Campbelltown City Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Kearns Public School.