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Tutors in Laverton North include a VIT-registered primary and early childhood teacher with a Master of Teaching, a medical graduate who was Sri Lanka's national top scorer in multiple science subjects and boasts nine years' tutoring experience, an ATAR 96.75 Dux, award-winning maths competitors, seasoned peer mentors, and current university students across law, science, and IT.

Preetika
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Preetika

Psychology Tutor Truganina, VIC
Being willing to help, but also acknowledge the rare instances where a tutor may be unable to help to a confident level. I believe it is better to acknowledge if you do not know something rather than pretend you do and risk teaching something that is incorrect. When this problem is encountered, however, it is up to the tutor to rectify this by…
Neusha
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Neusha

Psychology Tutor Seabrook, VIC
Keep an open communication, provide open and honest feedback and bring a confidence boost to the student. I am very patient…
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Chloe (Kelly)
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Chloe (Kelly)

Psychology Tutor Cairnlea, VIC
Help them gain confidence, and for them to do the best they can. Students that require tutoring are often ones that lack confidence in a subject area. Tutors are there to strengthen and encourage them. Breaking down difficult concepts and passing on my knowledge to students. Also, finding where a student has difficulty and working with them to…
Amy
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Amy

Psychology Tutor Cairnlea, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is approaching the student as the centre. The tutor must have an attention to detail to be able to recognise both strengths and weaknesses, and tailor lessons or questions when needed. A tutor must also understand the needs of each student. As a past education student and currently a psychology…
Daksh
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Daksh

Psychology Tutor Truganina, VIC
Provide effective feedback and inform students on skills which allow them to excel. Additionally, a tutor must also motivate the students to create aspirations for growth in life Inspirational and effective at motivating others which tend to be the principles of…
Gibson
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Gibson

Psychology Tutor Seddon, VIC
The best thing a tutor can do is to listen carefully and empathise with their students. Learning can be very difficult and it is very helpful, for a tutor, to realise that each individual has their own learning style, motivation, and attitudes towards any subject. Most importantly learner's wellbeing should be an important factor when tutoring. I…
Olivia
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Olivia

Psychology Tutor St Albans, VIC
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is equipping the student with the resources and tips they need to be able to be good and excel at a subject. Especially in english, it is important for the student to have the knowledge and analytical way of thinking to really excel and i think once they have been taught how to think this way they…
sophie
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sophie

Psychology Tutor Point Cook, VIC
I think one of the most important aspects is to be patient with the student. Its important to understand that each student is different, and create an environment that is comfortable for them to ask questions without feeling belittled or shunned. It takes great patience to achieve this; its important to go over aspects multiple times if needed,…
Venumi
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Venumi

Psychology Tutor Burnside, VIC
I believe that a tutor is not there to chastise and 'drill' concepts into a student's mind. The best thing that a tutor can do for their student is to create a positive, uplifting and supportive learning environment. This ensures that students feel comfortable to learn and improve so that they can approach their mistakes not with self-doubt and a…

Local Reviews

Madeline was a great tutor, friendly, easy going and understanding. I would highly recommend her to anyone needing help with their studies
Natalie Gesslein

Inside Laverton NorthTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 Oscar focused on solving worded quadratic equations and spent time graphing cubic functions.

Year 10 Ava worked through challenging derivatives questions, including the chain rule and product rule, and practiced inverse function problems using past exam material.

For Year 11 Dean, recent lessons involved tackling integration questions in preparation for an upcoming SAC and revising key trigonometry concepts like the unit circle with homework review.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student's algebra work was often hard to follow—his working out can be very messy and unclear, making it tough to spot errors or review steps, especially with surds and fractions.

In Year 11 Methods, one student would jump into algebraic manipulation without first checking for possible simplifications, resulting in wasted time and confusion mid-solution.

Another Year 12 learner hesitated to attempt complex probability questions involving multiple variables, sometimes giving up early despite being capable of solving them.

When exam wording became tricky in senior maths, a lack of confidence led to missed opportunities on challenging problems.

Recent Achievements

One Laverton North tutor recently noticed Ava, a Year 12 student, no longer relies on the formula sheet for chain and product rules—she's now able to complete derivative calculations faster and from memory, after struggling to recall them before.

Oscar (Year 11) has started catching his own algebra mistakes with indices mid-question, rather than waiting for correction; he's also begun to approach difficult problems by trying new methods independently instead of hesitating.

In middle years, Dean has made a shift from frequent errors in expansion to self-checking his work—he picked up a mistake himself while reviewing solutions last week.

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 Altona Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Martin de Porres School.