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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Keswick Terminal include a STEM ambassador and university mentor, a medical student with a proven record of admissions test coaching, primary-to-high school specialists with years of private tutoring, an early childhood educator and counsellor experienced in K–12 support, plus competition-awarded achievers in maths, science, and English from selective schools.

Carmen
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Carmen

PDHPE Tutor Trinity Gardens, SA
Equip them with the tools they need to succeed. Most students do not achieve their full potential because they do not believe they have it in them. The most important thing a tutor can do is to help foster a love for learning and encourage a student to believe in themselves. If they believe in themselves, they can do anything. I am patient and…
Payal
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Payal

PDHPE Tutor Ascot Park, SA
- Personalise their learning to enhance the knowledge - Minimise the weaknesses a person have & frequently communicate things - Patience - Communication - and lastly Honest & open relationship with the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Noah
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Noah

PDHPE Tutor Lynton, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to get them passionate/interested in what they are learning about, motivating them to learn and improve without getting bored. Another important aspect is to help them establish good study habits and a will to understand the concepts rather than just going through repetitive…
Ryan
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Ryan

PDHPE Tutor Woodville North, SA
1. Build a positive and supportive relationship. 2. Assess the student's learning needs 3. Provide clear explanations and guidance 4. Encourage active learning 5. Monitor progress and adjust instruction Overall, the most important thing a tutor can do is to create a supportive and effective learning environment that meets the student's…
Harshil
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Harshil

PDHPE Tutor Clearview, SA
A tutor should empower students by making learning approachable, giving them tools to solve problems independently, and fostering a sense of self-confidence in their abilities. Building a strong foundation of understanding is crucial, but equally important is helping students develop critical thinking skills that they can apply beyond tutoring…
Luca
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Luca

PDHPE Tutor Rosslyn Park, SA
Make sure the students understand the concepts correctly. I am very patient and…

Local Reviews

The tutoring was fantastic. Izzy really enjoyed working with Maitreyee and feels fairly confident about how her test went (she even rang and said she would have been lost without the tutoring).
Leanne, Adelaide

Inside Keswick TerminalTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student James worked on surface area calculations and revisited key real number concepts, practising with metric units in problem-solving.

In Year 10, Olivia focused on simplifying surds—including addition, subtraction, and division with harder denominators—and clarified confusion around surd division through step-by-step examples.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Daniel practised solving log equations using basic logarithm laws and reviewed surds, especially rationalising denominators using conjugates.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11, a student struggled to keep working out organized when solving lengthy compound interest and polynomial division questions—"setting out for longer operations was messy, making it hard to spot errors."

Another senior student arrived late and missed key algebra basics, leading to confusion with substitutions.

In Year 7 maths, a learner sometimes avoided set homework and skipped reviewing past mistakes in decimals, so misunderstandings persisted.

Meanwhile, a Year 9 student hesitated to attempt unfamiliar circle theorem problems without clear steps laid out. This meant valuable lesson time was spent retracing rather than building new skills.

Recent Achievements

One Keswick Terminal tutor noticed a Year 10 student who had previously felt lost with polynomial long division now work through these problems on her own by lesson's end, showing real independence.

In Year 12, another student made a shift from confusion to clarity in conic sections: after some targeted revision, she started asking specific questions about the unit circle and then solved related problems independently.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 learner who used to stay quiet when stuck has begun actively explaining which steps confuse him in class—now working out solutions together with his tutor instead of guessing.

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 Thebarton Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Sports College South Australia - West Adelaide Football Club.