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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Lynton include a Cambridge- and MIT-trained PhD educator with global university teaching experience, school duxes and ATAR 98–99 achievers, seasoned youth mentors, state academic award-winners, medical and science undergraduates, accomplished coaches and arts leaders—each bringing proven excellence and deep experience working with K–12 students in both academic and extracurricular settings.

Lauren
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Lauren

PDHPE Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to put in time. They need to act as if it's not just a job which pays. Prepping lessons early, helping with questions outside of tutoring time, marking tests. All of these examples show a great tutor. - I put a lot of care into my work. - I love seeing others thrive through my help. - I…
Pari
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Pari

PDHPE Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I believe it is most important for a tutor to tailor their teaching according to the needs of their student. Many students learn in different ways such as visual or through different compounding activities to build a strong foundation before moving on to more difficult concepts. I believe being able to teach a student in the way that is most…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Terry
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Terry

PDHPE Tutor Adelaide, SA
A tutor's main job is to help re-explaining new concepts and/or help students consolidate new concepts as well as integrating new ones as they are being taught. Therefore, the most important things that a tutor can do for a student is to explain new concepts in simple and relatable terms, encourage interests in a particular subject and most…
Miranda
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Miranda

PDHPE Tutor Glenelg, SA
Identifying the student's strengths and weaknesses is crucial. I would ensure their strengths are reflected through their work and that we are spending extra time focusing on the weaker areas. As a tutor, you act as the student's moral support, as the subjects they are receiving tutoring for are the subjects they find the most challenging. You are…

Local Reviews

On top of everything very swift sharp responses when needed. There to help
Megan

Inside LyntonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Raffy worked on identifying different triangles, finding unknown angles using the **angle sum of triangles**, and applying Pythagoras' theorem to solve for missing sides.

For Year 9, Lauren practised expanding and factorising algebraic expressions as well as tackling **linear and simultaneous equations** through guided problem sets.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Jack focused on trigonometry by solving for unknown sides and angles using **sine and cosine rules**, incorporating real-world worded problems into practice.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student's maths work was often difficult to follow due to messy, unclear layout; as one tutor observed, "some of his working out was written in a clumsy way, making it hard to understand."

In Year 11, ongoing technical issues and a lack of organization—such as forgetting to charge devices or gather materials before online sessions—meant lesson time was lost troubleshooting rather than learning.

A senior student also showed visible drops in motivation and confidence after missing lessons due to illness, leading her to rely more on tutor prompts instead of attempting questions independently.

Recent Achievements

One Lynton tutor recently noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student's approach: after struggling to see how algebra connected to real problems, she started using phrases from past lessons out loud and even told her tutor she "enjoys math" for the first time.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student who used to wait passively now asks clarifying questions as soon as she feels unsure—something she never did before.

And with a younger student, there's been steady progress in independence; last week he completed most review questions independently, after months of needing constant prompting.

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 Blackwood Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Clapham Primary School.