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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Maylands include a university maths camp co-head with IB 97.75 and perfect mathematics scores, a Master of Teaching graduate with seven years' language teaching experience, an HSC Dux with SACE merits and national science awards, seasoned K–12 English and music specialists, experienced school coaches, peer mentors, Olympiad achievers, and postgraduates in STEM fields.

Sanjana
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Sanjana

Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most crucial things an instructor can do, in my opinion, are to boost confidence, provide individualised advice, and establish a secure environment for enquiries and candid self-evaluation. I can offer helpful criticism and useful techniques, like as dividing work into manageable portions, by allowing students to freely express their actual…
Brooke
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Brooke

Tutor Campbelltown, SA
The absolute best thing a tutor could do for a student would be to turn around the fear of a certain subject to a love for it. Anything a tutor does to debunk the mystery, confusion or difficulty a student is struggling with in a subject or area is a pursuit well worthwhile. My strengths would be my friendly, easygoing and approachable nature and…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Lisa
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Lisa

Tutor Prospect, SA
I believe the most important characteristic a tutor can have that would be best for a student is trust. If a student is able to trust my abilities and my teaching, I think this allows many benefits to the development and improvement of their learning. This includes them being able to open up to me more about questions or even other…
Maryam
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Maryam

Tutor Windsor Gardens, SA
I believe that it is crucial to be adaptive as a tutor as every student is different and may require different tools to help them learn, I also believe this is where being creative will assist me as I can come up with creative solutions to help students in understanding. Patient, creative and understanding as well as being…
Ying
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Ying

Tutor West Hindmarsh, SA
Providing clear explanations, patient support, and tailored approaches to their learning styles are essential. A tutor should cultivate critical thinking, encourage questions, and foster a positive learning atmosphere. Equally important is instilling self-confidence and a growth mindset, enabling students to tackle challenges independently. Also,…
Ruyi
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Ruyi

Tutor Colonel Light Gardens, SA
1. To raise the student's confidence level. One of the students' mom commented on how I was always encouraging her daughter, and she found that so important, because if her daughter kept feeling bad about herself and kept doubting her abilities, she would probably never be able to do well. 2. To make the session interesting. It would be tough for…
Trung
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Trung

Tutor Ferryden Park, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can give a student is confidence. However, this is not just a feel self-assurance in their learning but a confidence and self-security to be wrong. The imperative of tutoring is not to build knowledge but to create an environment for learning, this means allowing students the freedom to express their…
Michael
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Michael

Tutor Pooraka, SA
To teach a student how to learn. I have studied and worked with multi-nationals and people from diverse backgrounds and levels of education. I have served in several leadership roles both as a student and as an engineer. I believe this gives me the people skills that i need as a tutor. With my experience as an engineering student I have used…
Michael
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Michael

Tutor Pooraka, SA
To teach a student how to learn. I have studied and worked with multi-nationals and people from diverse backgrounds and levels of education. I have served in several leadership roles both as a student and as an engineer. I believe this gives me the people skills that i need as a tutor. With my experience as an engineering student I have used…
Natansh
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Natansh

Tutor Pooraka, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is helping around with the difficulties the student is facing in their curriculum. Improving on their weaknesses on the whole improves the quality of learning and makes them more viable to achieve their potential. My biggest strength is to be able to connect with students, relatively easily.…

Local Reviews

We are really happy with Paul. He is doing a great job.
Jayne

Inside MaylandsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Pranavi covered timetables up to 12x and practised recognising basic equivalent fractions using denominators up to 5.

In Year 7, Milly worked on converting fractions to decimals and percentages as well as applying order of operations with division questions.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Harrison focused on solving quadratic equations by applying the null factor law and reviewed methods for factorising quadratics in preparation for upcoming assessments.

Recent Challenges

In Year 7–8 maths, several students relied heavily on written calculation for times tables (e.g., "she needs to work out the answer on paper" for 12 × 12), which slowed progress in fractions and long division.

A tutor noted, "she sometimes puts the 3 in the thousands column instead of hundreds," revealing how layout issues disrupted multi-digit subtraction.

In Year 10 algebra, one student could express answers verbally but struggled to write equations accurately—especially with negative coefficients and variables—often missing crucial signs.

In English, another student's tendency to omit quotation marks or misplace commas made dialogue unclear and marked down her writing.

Recent Achievements

One Maylands tutor noticed Milly, a high school student, now self-corrects her mistakes in algebraic expressions—she highlights like terms and revises her answers without prompting, which was a big shift from needing step-by-step help.

In another session, Harrison demonstrated greater independence in trigonometry by recalling the correct ratios and showing his full working when solving for unknown sides, something he'd hesitated to do previously.

Meanwhile, with younger students, Naba moved from tracing numbers with guidance to writing several digits unaided (2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9) during maths activities.

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 St Peters Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Trinity Gardens School.