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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Marryatville include a university medallist and former school dux, a mathematics teacher with Dean's List honours and postgraduate education, an aerospace engineer passionate about STEM outreach, experienced K–12 educators with over a decade of classroom expertise, accomplished music and coding coaches, peer mentors, and subject award-winners across maths, science, English and the arts.

Kavya
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Kavya

Psychology Tutor Clarence Gardens, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is make sure they don't generalize their teaching across all students. Every student has their own strengths/ weaknesses and their own ways of learning and it is important for a tutor to recognize and build upon that so they reach their potential. I am incredibly patient and my passion for what I teach is…
Michelle
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Michelle

Psychology Tutor Enfield, SA
Just being able to provide a good quality of help and support for a student, in an encouraging and motivating manner, is what I would consider to be the most important thing a tutor could do for their student. Furthermore, creating that resilience and space of being able to ask for help without feeling shame or guilt along the way. I believe that…
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Local Reviews

Connor has been reliable and knowledgeable. One of his greatest strengths in his ability to explain mathematical concepts and listens effectively. Would definitely recommend.
Lukas Mayer, Adelaide

Inside MarryatvilleTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Ethan worked on graphing lines from equations in both gradient-intercept and general form, and practiced problems involving simultaneous equations.

Year 11 student Priya explored non-right angled triangle trigonometry by applying the Cosine Rule to solve for unknown sides and angles, then tackled problem-solving questions using these methods.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Daniel focused on differential calculus, specifically mastering the chain rule for derivatives of composite functions through targeted exercises.

Recent Challenges

Several high school students displayed a reluctance to show full working in complex algebra, particularly when sketching graphs or using the quadratic formula.

In Year 11, for instance, he skipped writing out steps when finding discriminants, which made it difficult to pinpoint calculation slips during feedback.

A Year 12 student tackling advanced derivatives sometimes leaned heavily on memorized rules rather than breaking down problems step-by-step, resulting in confusion with composite functions.

At a Year 8 level, one student's written work on volume conversions was disorganized—lines crossed and calculations squeezed into margins—making revision harder and leading to missed marks on unit changes.

Recent Achievements

A Marryatville tutoring session recently saw a Year 10 student who used to skip steps when solving quadratic equations now pausing to check his work with extra verification methods, showing new care and independence.

In Year 11, one student who previously relied heavily on hints for matrix multiplication was able to complete all the assignment questions after just a few prompts, having clearly internalised the process.

Meanwhile, a younger student who had been hesitant about applying measurement concepts in real-life problems volunteered examples from her own day-to-day experiences and worked through perimeter tasks without waiting 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 Burnside Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Marryatville High School.