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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Para Hills include a preschool teacher with 20+ years' experience and curriculum design expertise, multiple ATAR 98–99.75 graduates and subject duxes, university medallists, STEM competition winners, seasoned K–12 support officers and peer mentors, specialist Maths Olympiad achievers, and educators with backgrounds in early childhood, special needs, swimming instruction, and academic coaching.

Bisma
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Bisma

Psychology Tutor Hope Valley, SA
A tutor is supposed to ensure learning and the growth of the students academic skills. Also to make sure their goals are strong enough for them to reach success in the future. I am patient and I do not back down if the student is not ready to learn. I use different tactics to engage the student such as asking them what they struggle with and…
Jaswinder kaur
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Jaswinder kaur

Psychology Tutor Gould Creek, SA
A tutor can minimize the weakness of students so that thay can achieve their goal. Tutor can make them able to read and understand the statement of a question. He/she can enable them to deal with academic problems. I can minimize the weakness in my students and enable them to deal with academic difficulties. I also can motivate them to study well…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

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Isla
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Isla

Psychology Tutor Direk, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can offer a child is patience. Impatience does not create a suitable learning environment. Qualities like these can prevent a child from wanting to learn, they may negatively associate with the subject, putting them further behind. Every child can succeed, given enough time. I have strengths as coach that…
Hanny
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Hanny

Psychology Tutor Burton, SA
In my opinion, as a tutor, it is very important to cherish the students as they progressed, acknowledging their work and encourage them to try to do with their full potential. Besides, it is important to have an understanding of their best way of learning, and encourage them to question in their learning. Furthermore, awareness of their wellbeing…
Lily
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Lily

Psychology Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most important thing would be to teach a student that studying shouldn't be a chore, and that giving it their all matters more than receiving a perfect grade. I understand that each student is different, and that not every approach will work for an individual, so it is essential that their tutor knows how to adapt to their needs while still…
Emily
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Emily

Psychology Tutor Collinswood, SA
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is guide that student to success, this can be achieved by listening and being attentive to the childs learning styles and needs. Patience and understanding. I believe that patience is one of the most important qualities to have as a tutor, this is because it can be very frustrating as a…
Maryam
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Maryam

Psychology Tutor Gilles Plains, 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…
Michelle
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Michelle

Psychology Tutor Enfield, SA
Just being able to provide a good quality of help and support for a student, in an encouraging and motivating manner, is what I would consider to be the most important thing a tutor could do for their student. Furthermore, creating that resilience and space of being able to ask for help without feeling shame or guilt along the way. I believe that…
Therese
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Therese

Psychology Tutor Dernancourt, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to ultimately inspire them in a love of learning and hopefully pass onto them capsules of knowledge which are priceless. My strengths as a tutor are to challenge the pupils to think abstractly about language and harness the true power it possesses. I love hearing the pupil's own…
Sanjana
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Sanjana

Psychology 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…

Local Reviews

Alicia, is softly spoken and paced and this appeals to my teen Rose. Alicia picks up when Rose hasn't understood and works to explain it differently until she does. We are very happy with the confidence Rose has gained in maths & the skills she can now apply at school.
Ali, Para Hills

Inside Para HillsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Marley focused on three-digit division with remainders and translating between mixed and proper fractions, using number lines to help visualise concepts.

Year 8 student Sam worked through simplifying fractions and placing them accurately on a number line, while also being introduced to improper and mixed fractions for the first time.

For Year 10, Jess practised solving complex algebraic equations and completed short- and long-form multiplication and division problems from her current maths homework.

Recent Challenges

A Year 3 student avoided writing out full working when subtracting with borrowing, leading to confusion—he skipped showing steps in subtraction, which hid where he went wrong.

In Year 8, a reluctance to check answers in long division meant repeated errors were not spotted and fixed.

For a senior student revising calculus, notes showed that formulas were often looked up rather than memorised or derived, slowing progress during problem sets.

After making spelling errors on written responses in English (Year 7), over-reliance on autocorrect left gaps in learning; the result was hesitation when composing without digital aids.

Recent Achievements

A Para Hills tutor noticed one Year 10 student who'd previously avoided writing steps in maths now independently writes each stage before calculating answers, which has helped reduce careless errors.

In a recent high school session, another student made a leap with division: after scoring just 40% on an initial worksheet, they practiced times tables and division patterns, then reached 85% accuracy on the next attempt.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student who used to guess at the time is now confidently working out "quarter past" and "quarter to" questions aloud without prompts—something that took lots of encouragement earlier in the term.

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 Para Hills Community Hub Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Para Hills School.