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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Lapstone's tutors include a Blaxland High mathematics teacher with two decades' experience across three countries, a homeschool mother of six and children's choir leader, a university-level peer mentor and software engineering student, high-achieving school duxes in science and maths, youth sports coaches, and passionate subject specialists with extensive K–12 mentoring and teaching backgrounds.

Kevin
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Kevin

Tutor Regentville, NSW
Passing on all that we know in order to put them in a position to succeed. I feel that applies to all walks of life whether its being a tutor or helping a colleague at work. Patience is also important cause like I said in a previous question, everyone learns at a different pace and it is important to understand that and make adjustments based on…
Veronica
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Veronica

Tutor Regentville, NSW
I believe that the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is improving their confidence, not only in the classroom but within themselves and their abilities. This is fundamental for them to release their capabilities and strive for greatness. I am kind, creative, and patient. I find that these attributes that I possess, help me…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

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Keira
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Keira

Tutor Warrimoo, NSW
The most important thing for a tutor to do is to make sure the student can feel confident, making the subject enjoyable to learn, rather than stressful and disheartening. I try to understand what part they are struggling with, so I can help them understand, rather than learn rote answers. So this means I'm patient, and a good…
Darsh
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Darsh

Tutor South Penrith, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do are to make concepts clear, build students' confidence, and create a supportive learning environment. By breaking down difficult material and personalising lessons, students can better understand the content at their own pace. By helping them feel confident and supported, it encourages active engagement and…
Mattson
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Mattson

Tutor Valley Heights, NSW
Some of the most important responsibilities of a tutor include being available and easy to contact, which ensures that I am consistently there for the student. In addition, explaining concepts clearly through adaptable teaching methods is essential, as students learn in different ways. It is also important to check for genuine understanding rather…

Local Reviews

Tutor is going really great. My son improved a lot in division just after the 2nd week. And Lidya, she's fantastic. I would highly recommend it to any of my friends who needs a tutor for their child.
Katherine

Inside LapstoneTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Alexia worked on multiplying and dividing algebraic expressions as well as simplifying these equations using worksheets in preparation for an upcoming test.

For Year 9, Ethan practised classifying like terms and interpreting frequency tables alongside constructing dot plots and histograms to strengthen his statistics skills.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Mia focused on quadratic equations—both simplifying them and solving related problems—while also tackling simultaneous equations during her session.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 algebra, one student did not bring the previous two test papers to tutoring—this slowed feedback on their exam strategies and meant "I gave her already" extra copies instead of focusing on new material.

For a senior student working on proofs, the tutor noted over-reliance on written notes rather than attempting problems unaided, which made efficient recall difficult under timed conditions.

Meanwhile, in a Year 8 session on fractions, homework was set but completion is still unconfirmed for next week; practice outside lessons is essential for consolidating these skills before moving onto mixed-number operations.

Recent Achievements

A Lapstone tutor recently noticed a big change in a Year 11 student who, after previously hesitating with expanding and simplifying algebraic expressions, now tackles bracket expansions on his own and checks his work for accuracy.

In Year 9, another student who used to overthink percentage problems has started working through multi-step calculations without pausing to double-check every answer—she's trusting her process more each week.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student showed new independence by recalling and applying last session's lesson on fractions without any hints, then finished the set of fraction word problems entirely solo.

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 Blaxland Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Lapstone Public School.