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Private physics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Marsden Park's tutors include a former school maths teacher with a master's degree, an Olympiad and university medalist, experienced primary specialists for OC/Selective prep, high-achieving Extension Maths graduates (ATARs up to 96.75), accomplished peer mentors and coaches, passionate psychology and science undergraduates, and award-winning volunteers dedicated to supporting K–12 students' growth.

MuhammadUmer
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MuhammadUmer

Physics Tutor Mount Druitt, NSW
Tutoring is like a service to student in which tutor can act as a mentor to student to develop self confidence and knowledge to student which can help students to live a life which they always dreamed of. My greatest strength is to make students involve in what I am teaching and making things simple to make sure they understand. I really believe…
Yamini
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Yamini

Physics Tutor Parklea, NSW
In my perspective the best thing the tutor can do for the student is to understand the child completely, make a good bond with them and help them to learn infinite things. My strengths as a teacher are I understand the child by the face expressions, my teaching concept is pretty much strong and before teaching any child I make sure to plan the…
1st Lesson Trial

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Rawan
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Rawan

Physics Tutor Rouse Hill, NSW
The most important thing to be done, rather than jumping directly into the syllabus, is to listen to the students express their strengths and weaknesses in the subject. This is to be aware of where to allocate time with the student so we address what is most important and challenging to them. As a tutor, I maintain a flexible environment, trying…
Ayesh
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Ayesh

Physics Tutor Kellyville Ridge, NSW
Give students the motivation that they are indeed smart enough to learn difficult concepts and apply them with ease. It is important not to confuse students especially those in younger years and also it is important to know about each students abilities and teach at a pace according to that. I have experience, am hard working and have a personally…
Ashar
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Ashar

Physics Tutor Rouse Hill, NSW
The most important thing would be to get them interested in academics so that they can pursue knowledge on their own initiative, as well as motivate them to do well in their studies. Good grades are also important, but not as much as those traits mentioned before. My ability to simplify difficult concepts so that an inexperienced person can pick…
arpit
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arpit

Physics Tutor Stanhope Gardens, NSW
help them with all the problems and teach them in such a way that they would find the problems easy. To teach the students fast and easy way of solving problems and how the could handle them. Patience. I would explain the same thing for 5-6 times. And i put a lot of effort in the person and teach them at their pace. I scrutinize on what areas they…
Andrew
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Andrew

Physics Tutor Colyton, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do is to realise when a student actually understands a topic, or if they need more help. Too often students will say that they understand but they don't want to admit they still don't. The tutor should be able to break down a subject in multiple ways, and choose which way fits particular students' learning…
Sowjanya
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Sowjanya

Physics Tutor Kings Langley, NSW
These are some of the most important things that I feel are critical that a tutor should be doing: Truly personalize the learning Incorporate connections to the student's interests Teach to the student's strengths Minimize the student's weaknesses It's also important for a tutor to keep updated with his/her knowledge To value every student…
Jaspreet
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Jaspreet

Physics Tutor Jordan Springs, NSW
Tutor should be like a big brother for students loveable, relatable and respectable. Great way of teaching using daily life examples and…

Local Reviews

Rishita is lovely. Paige responds well to her teaching style and I think she is a good fit for Paige as a tutor.
Jane

Inside Marsden ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Aidan focused on interpreting and sketching quadratic graphs, applying the quadratic formula, and understanding gradients, often using pen-and-paper calculations.

For Year 11, Priya worked through exponential equations and logarithms, linking them to solving quadratic equations as part of advanced algebra practice.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Jack revised differentiation techniques including the product rule and chain rule, alongside tackling problems involving the differentiation of exponential functions from his school booklet.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student regularly left homework incomplete or rushed, especially with trigonometry, leading to forgotten formulas week-to-week—he was not completing HW to the best of his ability which is impacting his ability to retain the content.

In Year 10 algebra lessons, another student relied heavily on memorising rules rather than understanding them, struggling when questions changed format.

A senior (Year 11) found it difficult to simplify indices before starting calculus problems because basic practice was skipped; this slowed down progress and made new concepts feel overwhelming.

During sessions, several high schoolers lost focus or hesitated to ask questions, making it harder for them to regain confidence after setbacks.

Recent Achievements

One Marsden Park tutor noticed a Year 11 student who, after struggling with trigonometry and graph transformations, was able to clearly explain the impact of changing variables on parabolic graphs and confidently graph them himself.

In another high school session, a Year 10 student who had always hesitated to ask for help started speaking up when stuck, working through challenging bearings questions that previously left him lost.

Meanwhile, a younger student in Year 4 moved from guessing at measurement conversions to independently turning centimeters into meters and solving area problems step by step without 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 Mt Druitt Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Marsden Park Public School.