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Private software-design-development tutors that come to you in person or online

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Leawood Gardens' tutors include a PhD scientist and qualified teacher with high school classroom experience, a Dux with an ATAR of 99.95 and university medal, award-winning Olympiad and Maths Competition finalists, Kumon-trained primary specialists, seasoned K–12 maths and science tutors, IB scholars, debating coaches, youth mentors, tennis coaches, and multilingual subject prizewinners.

Derrick
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Derrick

Software Dev Tutor Kensington, SA
For me the most important thing a tutor can do is to guide the student in such a way that at the end of it, the student is able to lead by himself in the direction he was originally intended to go. It is similar to the lines of giving a man a fish to teaching him to fish. The tutor has to ignite the spark of interest in the student so that the…
Mostafa Didar
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Mostafa Didar

Software Dev Tutor Norwood, SA
Besides helping them understand and learn a topic, the tutor should also help the student master the topic through mastery learning. Mastery learning is a way of designing units of work so that each set of tasks focuses on a particular learning objective and students must master a task to move onto the next one. The tutor should also help the…
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galen
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galen

Software Dev Tutor Kent Town, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is to see what subjects interest the student to bring out the potential of that student in that subject and as I had very bad teachers while growing up I learnt to support and make it easy for the student to understand I have patience in dealing with people and can cater to different variety of people even…
Mythri
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Mythri

Software Dev Tutor Adelaide, SA
1. Assess and understand the current strengths and areas of difficulty of the student. 2. Set up a time table (plan) which agrees with the student's schedule. 3. Cover and revise the core concepts which are pre-requisites for the understanding of the current curriculum. 4. Work through the lessons one-by-one and test understanding through…
Mrunmayee
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Mrunmayee

Software Dev Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is not to flaunt their own brainpower like a flashy superhero cape. Instead, it’s about helping students discover their own hidden superpowers and showing them how to wield these talents for their own success. Think of it like being a treasure map that leads them to their own buried gems—helping them…
Pankaj
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Pankaj

Software Dev Tutor Fullarton, SA
To understand the weakness of the student and to address it with corrective action to motivate him to perform with more confidence and subject expertise while taking away the student's fear or anxiety that may come up with studies. Patience, perseverance, good listener, excellent mentoring skills, content management skills, ability to adapt to the…
Alex
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Alex

Software Dev Tutor Beulah Park, SA
I consider the two most important things for a tutor to do are to first inspire confidence in the student and identify the area of difficulty as precisely as possible. Students are generally not equipped to identify the precise area of their difficulty as they don't have the knowledge to fully place it in the context of the subject. By…
Arjun
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Arjun

Software Dev Tutor Kent Town, SA
I believe patience and empathy toward students who are struggling is one of the most important factors while being a tutor. I also posses organisational and planning skills so that I can structure lessons and prepare for sessions effectively so that all sessions are optimised. Adaptation to a student’s learning pace is also very crucial as each…
Hrishikesh
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Hrishikesh

Software Dev Tutor Kent Town, SA
Being a role model they can look up to by understanding their perspective of the concept and making them feel heard is what I consider the most important thing a tutor can do for a student. Ability to relate with the students, form a connection and provide a unique explanation based on their…
Simranjeet Singh
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Simranjeet Singh

Software Dev Tutor Kent Town, SA
Being a tutor, one can do a lot of things for a student apart from teaching. A tutor has the responsibility of mentoring the students in career and general life. The tutor should be empathetic and able to understand the student to provide relevant support. I am a high achiever myself. Being a uni student, I can relate to the students' problems in…
Aastha
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Aastha

Software Dev Tutor Wayville, SA
A tutor is not just a subject tutor but a mentor, a friend and, a counsellor. Having friendly conversation, helps them to open up and discuss the issues they are facing in the subject. Taking small steps and praising words, helps them build confidence. regular revision and taking assessments also clear the doubts of the students Being a mother of…
Brian
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Brian

Software Dev Tutor Rostrevor, SA
Important things a tutor can do for a student can be as subtle as providing the basic habits of Learning and self progression for the student. Many younger students struggle with this and tutoring can only go so far for them. Enforcing self-learning and the confidence to learn sometimes can be more beneficial than the topics covered. Personal…
Peter
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Peter

Software Dev Tutor St Peters, SA
Listen and give encouragement/positive feedback, while addressing weaknesses. Identifying where someone is going wrong and explaining this in a friendly and respectful manner. Explaining why things are done and why they are done in a certain way/order. Patience. Knowledge. The ability to explain ideas/concepts in simpler, different and relevant…
Matthew
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Matthew

Software Dev Tutor Adelaide, SA
Being able to help build a students confidence in themselves, but also to teach them how to problem solve and learn. - I am very patient as a tutor - I have studied and tutored for a long time - I can teach concepts in a variety of ways in order to find the way the student learns best - I have an engineering/maths/computer science mindset when…

Local Reviews

Thanks Evan for tutoring my topic 6 in SACE mathematics methods, when I had so much difficulties of understanding the derivative concept.
Jeffery

Inside Leawood GardensTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Lucy worked on index laws and practiced adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing fractions.

For Year 11, Divyanshu focused on differentiating rational functions using first principles in Mathematical Methods and covered the basics of stoichiometry and unit conversions in Chemistry.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Mia tackled titration questions in Chemistry—including a brief introduction to chromatography—and explored the chain rule for differentiation in Maths using both f'(x) and dy/dx notation.

Recent Challenges

In Year 12 Chemistry, one student often hesitated to attempt drawing complex organic structures without first reviewing textbook examples—this led to delays and incomplete practice, especially with esters and amides.

As a tutor noted, "he struggled to number the side chains accurately," which affected his confidence during timed tasks.

Meanwhile, in Year 9 Maths, another student found recalling index laws from memory challenging; when faced with unfamiliar surd questions or fraction conversions, written working was sometimes skipped or left half-finished.

This resulted in errors going unnoticed until later review sessions, adding frustration and extra catch-up work before assessments.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Leawood Gardens recently noticed a big shift with a Year 9 student who, after previously struggling to put pen to paper, wrote a full-length essay independently within just one week.

Meanwhile, a senior chemistry student moved from needing step-by-step help with reaction equations to accurately identifying amines solo as primary, secondary, or tertiary by the end of the session.

For a younger learner, Lucy has begun tackling fraction problems without prompting—last term she hesitated and needed reminders for each step, but now attempts solutions solo before asking for guidance.

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 Fullarton Park Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Seymour College.