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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in North Melbourne include a primary teaching master's graduate with classroom experience, a 40-year veteran maths and English teacher, experienced STEM and language mentors from top universities, state-topping achievers, Olympiad participants, peer leaders from selective schools, and creative writing coaches—offering students a rich mix of expertise, academic excellence, and real-world teaching skills.

Chaitrali
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Chaitrali

Info Processing Tutor Melbourne, VIC
Problem-solving. Patient. Understand the person in front of you so that you can solve his/her problem. Be the best friend and try to give the answer to every query of the student. Tutoring others make me feel more confident and I can elaborate on concepts such that students will understand it easily. Get to know and learn more…
Neeserg
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Neeserg

Info Processing Tutor Melbourne, VIC
I think tutors have to have the appropriate amount of empathy to understand, not only the way they learn, but also their reason for learning. Best thing tutor can do is align his values with his student's. I think this is a way to frustrate and alienate him. I can approach a problem the way student does. This gives me an insight into where they…
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Revanth
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Revanth

Info Processing Tutor Carlton North, VIC
Trying to understand the level of math understanding of the student and to work on the math concepts right from the level the students are not clear. For tutoring profession one very important skill is to deliver the knowledge, tutors may be intelligent and superskilled but they become great teachers only when then can get down to the level of…
Khushbu
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Khushbu

Info Processing Tutor Southbank, VIC
A tutor plays very important role in a student's life. A tutor can not only help the child in his or her academics but also help the student in grooming their personality and building the confidence to tackle the problems around As a tutor I am very flexible with my method of teaching. I don't restrict myself to one way of teaching. I believe…
Daniel Ross
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Daniel Ross

Info Processing Tutor Southbank, VIC
I think the most important things that a tutor can do is to instil in students the drive to learn more about a subject, fix any misconceptions they may have, and to make them feel comfortable enough to ask any questions they have. I think my strengths come from finding gaps in a student’s knowledge and using appropriate measures to rectify them.…
Rochelle
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Rochelle

Info Processing Tutor Princes Hill, VIC
Try to understand their problems and weaknesses and help them to get over it by guiding them . Help them to overcome their difficulties they face in any subjects. Help them to concentrate more and learn things quickly. 1. Problem Solving 2. Organization 3. Communication skills 4. Learner 5. Creativity 6. Openness 7. Empathy 8. Understand…
Ashar
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Ashar

Info Processing Tutor Southbank, VIC
The most important things that one can do for a student is make the learning material relatable to them. Which means that giving real world examples and relating the material to something of importance. I have been a student for most of my life, so I relate a lot to the students needs and how to help them in learning. This I think is my greatest…
Cameron
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Cameron

Info Processing Tutor Kensington, VIC
Listening to the student, instead of simply talking at the student. Helping the student gain a mindset for actively learning the material and developing confidence in the subject. Lastly, creating a rapport for the student and a good learning environment. My strengths would be an ability to listen to the student and then try approaches that seem…
Austin
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Austin

Info Processing Tutor Seddon, VIC
I think the three most important things a tutor can do are understanding the student’s specific learning needs, patiently supporting students as they get to grips with a process or concept and knowing the subject content and study design. These priorities ensure that the content of tutoring sessions is relevant, delivered in a sensitive timely…
Auren
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Auren

Info Processing Tutor Coburg, VIC
To really understand where the student is coming from. Far too often throughout my own life I have been frustrated with the way in which teachers and tutors treat you as just another student and bulldoze you with an answer before you've even managed to get you question out. To be able to adapt their teaching style to better suit the student. To…
Pratheksha
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Pratheksha

Info Processing Tutor Maribyrnong, VIC
1. Create Effective Classroom Procedures to Keep Disruptions to a Minimum 2. Be Transparent With Students About How to Succeed 3. Apply Effective Classroom Management and teaching Skills 1. Helping students achieve their potential 2. Easily make students understand the…
Maheswary
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Maheswary

Info Processing Tutor West Footscray, VIC
In my personal opinion besides teaching a student what is in the unit/study guide, a tutor should be taking responsibility in creating a fun learning environment and encouraging and motivating the students to be confident. This would help to enhance the students performance. The strength I have as an individual is I am able to create a comfortable…
James
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James

Info Processing Tutor Alphington, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them feel confident enough in themselves and their abilities to succeed. A tutor should not simply give the answers to their students, but do what they can to provide the support for the students to reach the correct answers themselves. I am very patient; if a student cannot find the…

Local Reviews

I'm happy with Robert!
Joe, North Melbourne

Inside North MelbourneTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Oliver worked through multiplying and dividing fractions as well as solving simple algebraic equations using step-by-step examples.

In Year 8, Mia practised converting between decimals, fractions, and percentages, and simplified expressions by applying rules for order of operations.

For Year 10, Liam explored linear graphs—focusing on expanding and simplifying algebraic expressions before interpreting inequalities on number lines.

Recent Challenges

Messy layout caused issues for a Year 7 student when aligning digits in multi-step multiplication—"she sometimes wrote the ones in the tens column," leading to confusion and extra zeros.

In Year 10, incomplete working out during linear equation problems hid errors with negative signs, as noted: "he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors."

For a senior student tackling data analysis, relying on calculator outputs without manually checking units (km/h vs m/s) resulted in inconsistent answers across practice questions.

Unclear written working left mistakes undetected until review, slowing progress and adding frustration during revision.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in North Melbourne noticed a Year 10 student who had struggled with expanding and simplifying algebraic expressions—especially with negative numbers—was able to work through order of operations confidently by the end of the session, showing real independence compared to last week's hesitation.

In another high school lesson, a student who'd previously mixed up how to use formulas for speed, distance, and time began choosing the right equations on their own for real-life scenarios.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student moved from confusion about subtracting larger digits to solving these problems accurately without prompting, even explaining her steps out loud.

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