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

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Oakden's tutors include a former Year 7–12 school maths teacher and Olympiad coach, a STEM educator with years of K–12 experience, university students with ATARs up to 97.85 and academic awards, peer mentors and teaching assistants in maths and science, plus postgraduate engineers, data scientists, and multilingual specialists passionate about guiding young learners.

Phurwa
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Phurwa

Info Processing Tutor Marden, SA
Instead of focusing on traditional way of teaching, a teacher should be able to spark curiosity. Instead of telling them to write, teacher should tell them how writing makes you think critically. Additionally, teachers should understand that every student is unique and they might have different learning methods which suits them. Education system…
Karan
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Karan

Info Processing Tutor Walkerville, SA
TO EDUCATE TO EMPOWER WITH GOOD MORAL OUTLOOK TO MAKE AND BELIEVE IN HARDWORK AND POSITIVE OUTCOME. TO BE KIND TO EVERY HUMAN BEING AND TEACH EVERYONE WITH NO AGE RESTRICTIONS. My strengths as a tutor are 1) Perseverance 2) Confidence 3)Positive and handle difficulties effortlessly. 4) Attention to detail. 5)Kind and caring. 6)…
1st Lesson Trial

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Peter
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Peter

Info Processing Tutor Joslin, SA
Listen and give encouragement/positive feedback, while addressing weaknesses. Identifying where someone is going wrong and explaining this in a friendly and respectful manner. Explaining why things are done and why they are done in a certain way/order. Patience. Knowledge. The ability to explain ideas/concepts in simpler, different and relevant…
Samuel
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Samuel

Info Processing Tutor Firle, SA
Help him to develop - confidence and skills to learn new concepts and solve problems on his own. - appropriate background knowledge for future studies. I also encourage students letting them know when they have taken a step forward I think that my friendly temperament and patience have always helped me in my approach to students of all ages…
Natasha
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Natasha

Info Processing Tutor St Morris, SA
The most important thing is for a tutor to understand the student and listen to them. They need to accomodate to what the student thinks they need work on, but a tutor should also offer suggestions as well as motivate their student, encouraging them and helping them to be the best they can be. My strengths would be that I am a good motivator and I…
Alex
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Alex

Info Processing Tutor Beulah Park, SA
I consider the two most important things for a tutor to do are to first inspire confidence in the student and identify the area of difficulty as precisely as possible. Students are generally not equipped to identify the precise area of their difficulty as they don't have the knowledge to fully place it in the context of the subject. By…
Joshua
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Joshua

Info Processing Tutor North Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is creating lesson plans and methods based around that student. The tutor should also never make a student feel dumb or less capable, but instead should show the students that they have the same capabilities as their peers, it may just take other methods, and concepts that they are not getting…
Hrishikesh
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Hrishikesh

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
Being a role model they can look up to by understanding their perspective of the concept and making them feel heard is what I consider the most important thing a tutor can do for a student. Ability to relate with the students, form a connection and provide a unique explanation based on their…
Shashwath
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Shashwath

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is truly understand the person’s problems, challenges, and learning gaps. Everyone learns differently, and effective tutoring begins with listening carefully and identifying where they are genuinely struggling. A tutor should pause and address difficulties properly rather than rushing to simply…
Arjun
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Arjun

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
I believe patience and empathy toward students who are struggling is one of the most important factors while being a tutor. I also posses organisational and planning skills so that I can structure lessons and prepare for sessions effectively so that all sessions are optimised. Adaptation to a student’s learning pace is also very crucial as each…
Simranjeet Singh
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Simranjeet Singh

Info Processing Tutor Kent Town, SA
Being a tutor, one can do a lot of things for a student apart from teaching. A tutor has the responsibility of mentoring the students in career and general life. The tutor should be empathetic and able to understand the student to provide relevant support. I am a high achiever myself. Being a uni student, I can relate to the students' problems in…
Tamana
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Tamana

Info Processing Tutor Salisbury Downs, SA
I think the most important things are that a tutor should should consider are knowing the student's leaning style because not every student are the same to just get a question or example at one go, it is important to make the student ask questions or ask them questions so they think outside the box and get a better understanding. I think my…

Local Reviews

Watching my child's confidence improve as she develops her Math skills has been very rewarding.
Tracy, Oakden

Inside OakdenTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Ella worked on calculating the volume of rectangular prisms and revisited times tables for fluency.

Year 9 student Felix tackled algebraic expansion using index laws and completed practice questions on the business applications of percentages.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student William focused on rearranging formulas in algebra and converting numbers to scientific notation as part of his maths assignment.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student, when tackling algebraic expansion, "needed reminders to multiply—not add—terms inside brackets," leading to confusion with signs and incomplete simplification.

In Year 11 calculus revision, the habit of only practicing familiar quotient rule questions meant she missed opportunities to apply rules flexibly in new contexts.

A Year 7 student showed inconsistent attention to unit conversions; missing or mismatched units often crept into answers during multi-step measurement tasks.

Meanwhile, a primary student working on division sometimes left homework incomplete, making it harder to build reliable methods before moving ahead.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Oakden recently saw a Year 10 student who, after struggling to work independently, now completes linear equations on her own and only needs help with fraction-based questions—last week, she solved the final three without prompts.

Another high schooler, previously hesitant to speak up when stuck in chemistry, has begun jotting down key points herself and asks for clarification as soon as confusion arises.

Meanwhile, a younger student who once rushed through maths is pausing to double-check her working out before answering; last session, she caught and fixed her own mistake without any reminders.

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 Greenacres Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Heritage College Incorporated.