Due to the current situation we are experiencing significant demand for tutoring. Fast track your enrolment online: Enrol Online Now

Private engineering-studies tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Tutors in O'Malley include a 99.40 ATAR achiever with national mathematics and chemistry awards, an Olympiad-selected physics student now tutoring at Narrabundah College, a seasoned maths tutor and IELTS instructor with dual engineering degrees, an experienced youth dance teacher and refugee tutor, and others excelling in mentoring, science enrichment, and creative teaching for K–12 students.

Sparsh
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan

Sparsh

Engineering Studies Tutor Acton, ACT
A tutor can make a student love the subject he/she hates. The most important thing for a tutor is to understand the student, his/her interests, aptitude, and what he/she is inclined towards. If you have a basic idea of the student mindset you can develop techniques to make them understand the subject in a way they don't find it hard. Gamification…

Local Reviews

We are happy with the tutor and so is my daughter.
Eugenia

Inside O'MalleyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Harry practised mental addition and subtraction, including using a number line and jump counting to make calculations faster.

In Year 8, Sam worked on applying index laws for multiplication and division as well as expressing numbers in scientific notation.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Lily focused on graphing parabolas by hand and with Desmos, along with extracting features of quadratic equations such as turning points and axis of symmetry.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student often relied on guessing rather than structured working when tackling algebraic problems—"sometimes just tried to solve questions through guessing"—which led to confusion with positive and negative numbers.

In a Year 8 session, homework was frequently incorrect but improved dramatically when completed alongside the tutor, highlighting a lack of independent checking at home.

For one Year 3 learner, distraction and off-topic conversations regularly interrupted progress during basic addition tasks.

Meanwhile, a senior student tackling trigonometry tended to apply unrelated formulas instead of recalling general principles, slowing their ability to adapt in unfamiliar question types.

Recent Achievements

One O'Malley tutor noticed a Year 10 student who had previously struggled with translating graphs now recognising and applying the correct transformation steps independently after just one clear explanation.

Another high schooler made visible progress in quadratics—after weeks of difficulty, she could finally factorise monic equations without prompts and even found the axis of symmetry herself during practice.

In a recent session with a younger student, the tutor observed him completing all his addition problems quickly and for the first time didn't need to use his fingers for counting, instead recalling strategies from previous lessons.

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 Woden Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Canberra Christian School.