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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Majura include a seasoned classroom teacher with a master's in education, an ANU physics honours scholar and Indigenous student mentor (ATAR 99), a former primary educator with seven years' experience, award-winning high school graduates (ATARs up to 98.6), peer tutors, youth coaches, Olympiad participants, and university students excelling in maths, science, and economics.

Rika
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Rika

PDHPE Tutor Turner, ACT
Having the heart to serve the students for their learning experience and growth. I give detailed, individual feedback to all…
Emily
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Emily

PDHPE Tutor Acton, ACT
I think the most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is listen. Listen to their problem, why they may not understand a concept, and then help to solve the problem together. I think that having fun, is also very important. One of my main goals aside from helping a student understand the content, is to help the student enjoy the…
1st Lesson Trial

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Local Reviews

Raquella is lovely and clearly a capable biology teacher.
Jocelyn

Inside MajuraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Rhys worked on the surface area and volume of 3D shapes using formulae, then started addressing challenges with fractions that appeared in his recent test.

In Year 10, Emily focused on probability topics for an upcoming assessment, including multiplying probabilities, complementary events, and conditional probability through real-life examples like medical tests.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Ben revised parabola equations—specifically sketching and factoring quadratics—by reviewing homework problems and tackling extra practice from his maths workbook.

Recent Challenges

In Year 10 algebra, one student persistently confused multiplication with addition when working with unknowns (e.g., treating 3x as 3 + x), and often hesitated or gave up if unsure how to proceed—he shows significant hesitance and gives up instead of persisting, a tutor noted.

Another senior student in Science lacked an organized notebook for notes, making it difficult to recall previous material and leading to repeated attempts at using formulas without true understanding.

Meanwhile, a primary student had no written record of completed homework, resulting in forgotten multiplication tables between sessions.

In each case, gaps in recording work or persisting through uncertainty left key concepts unmastered by lesson's end.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Majura noticed a Year 10 student who'd previously hesitated to ask questions now openly asks for help when stuck on parabolas, leading to clearer understanding after working through examples together.

Another high schooler, who used to make repeated errors with algebraic manipulation, started recognising and correcting their own mistakes while tackling weighted graph problems—an encouraging shift towards independence.

Meanwhile, one of the younger students surprised her tutor by finishing all multiplication and subtraction problems without any assistance by the end of the session, having needed frequent prompts just a week earlier.

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 Dickson Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Blue Gum Community School.