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

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Tutors in Phillip include an Australian Science Olympiad top 30 national finalist and ATAR 99.70 scorer, a seasoned maths and physics coach with college-level teaching invitations, award-winning Marist College graduates, experienced K–12 private tutors, peer mentors for university calculus, and passionate STEM specialists with advanced degrees in engineering, statistics, and education.

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Matthew

Engineering Studies Tutor Richardson, ACT
Being able to personalise the learning for the student. Adapting teaching style and to be able to teach to the student's strengths is important. Qualities play a significant role in building an understanding and teaching role between the tutor and the student. Qualities include being honest, flexible, patient, empathy, professional and most…

Local Reviews

Our daughter has been tutored by Setu for the past few weeks in maths. I can already see she is more confident. Setu has a lovely manner and explains things in a way that our daughter can understand. I would happily recommend Setu as a tutor and I look forward to seeing how much our daughter can improve her understanding and gain confidence.
Melinda Jamieson, Phillip

Inside PhillipTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Aryan focused on addition and subtraction using number lines and mental strategies, along with early work on multiplication.

For Year 9, Ethan revised solving quadratic equations by graphing parabolas and explored transformations like dilation and translation of quadratics.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Olivia prepared for an exam on surface area and volume of prisms, working through example problems and reviewing key formulas to strengthen understanding.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student kept trying to use unrelated formulas to solve equations, especially in worded maths problems, leading to confusion when the task required selecting the right method.

In Year 10 algebra, one learner consistently mixed up positives and negatives; their working was sometimes skipped or unclear, which made it harder to catch small errors during lessons.

For a senior student revising trigonometry, memorisation strategies were avoided—they tried recalling each equation separately instead of focusing on underlying patterns. This slowed down problem-solving and meant more time spent re-learning rather than consolidating new concepts.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Phillip noticed a Year 11 student who'd previously mixed up quadratic methods now independently solved monic equations and even found axes of symmetry without prompts.

Meanwhile, a Year 9 student who was initially confused by graph translations managed to explain the shift process back to the tutor after one clear example, showing real ownership of the idea.

In a recent primary session, a Year 5 girl—who last week hesitated to tackle negative numbers—quickly applied them unassisted during practice problems and checked her own work for errors before moving on.

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.