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

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Regents Park's tutors include a veteran mathematics teacher with five years' experience across Years 3–12, HSC high achievers including an ATAR 98.25 Sydney Girls graduate and multiple 90+ scorers, accomplished peer mentors, specialist college and academy instructors, and university scholars in engineering, science, law, data science, and education—many with competition distinctions or leadership backgrounds.

Raymond
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Raymond

Info Processing Tutor Bankstown, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to not only teach them, but allow them to be independent and learn. My strengths as a tutor includes that: I am patient, I find different methods to teach, and I try to understand them and teach them in a way how I understood…
Saqibur
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Saqibur

Info Processing Tutor Mount Lewis, NSW
Having faced challenges in Science during my high school, I am aware of the problems students face in understanding complex mathematical concepts. My method is to build a strong relationship with the student. The student should not take me as a teacher but more like a friend or brother whom the student can confide in. They should discuss their…
1st Lesson Trial

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Antoine
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Antoine

Info Processing Tutor Mount Lewis, NSW
Listening to students' problems and questions with maths, to then explain and answer their queries and therefore to better assist their understanding of the topics. Patience and understanding is my strength in tutoring therefore I can easily adapt to each student's strengths and weaknesses. Providing different examples to better their…
Gabriel
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Gabriel

Info Processing Tutor Georges Hall, NSW
One important thing a tutor can do is clearly understand what a student wants with their tutor. For example, if a student already know concepts really well, a tutor should be able to identify this and spend more time on areas where a student may struggle. Furthermore, it is important to consider the student first and foremost. A tutor should be…
Surya
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Surya

Info Processing Tutor Strathfield, NSW
- Listen carefully to the students' needs and wants - Assist and develop the student personally and academically with improved confidence - Make it more interesting, fun and enjoyable - Always be enthusiastic, positive and committed Strengths: Very patient, friendly, reliable and considerate, loves helping students in achieving to the best of…
Shyam Karthick
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Shyam Karthick

Info Processing Tutor Newington, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to build their confidence and foster a love for learning. Beyond just teaching concepts, a tutor should create a supportive environment where students feel encouraged to ask questions, make mistakes, and grow. Personalizing lessons to match a students learning style ensures better…
Mike
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Mike

Info Processing Tutor Clyde, NSW
I believe communication is the most important things a tutor can do for a student, because to make sure a student is learning, the tutor should understand what a student do or do not understand, once we understands where they are up to and what needs more clarification. Understanding is much better than just memorising something that they don't…
Mason
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Mason

Info Processing Tutor Harris Park, NSW
I consider helping students develop their own learning style is the most important things a tutor can do for a student. This way, students can clearly recognise their strengths and weaknesses and plan their own study accordingly to maximise their academic performance. In my opinion, student's own learning style encompasses time management skills,…
Narin
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Narin

Info Processing Tutor Parramatta, NSW
Few viable things which a tutor can do to help the students are: a) Deliver to them motivational thoughts and constantly encouraging them to do well. b) Critically thinking about any difficulty which might pose a hurdle in the pathway of student's learning and bring-forth ways to mitigate it. As a tutor, I believe to have the following…
Ha Cong Duy
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Ha Cong Duy

Info Processing Tutor Warwick Farm, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is to invoke a students' desire to learn and teach them how to learn by themselves. I strongly believe that a person's curiosity and learning skills will be valuable throughout their life. I think my biggest strength is my ability to invoke curiosity and inspire students to learn. I also tend to…
Alexandra
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Alexandra

Info Processing Tutor Ashbury, NSW
Most importantly to a student a tutor is there to provide a student with the most positive, educational experience that suits the student's needs. A tutor must be adaptable to different learning styles and needs, adjusting to what is most beneficial to the student. As a recent high school graduate, I can lend an empathetic ear to the student and…
Katherine
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Katherine

Info Processing Tutor Dundas, NSW
I think the most important things for a tutor to do is to make sure the student understands how to do the question, and not just give them the answer or formula. It is essential for them to utilise all the skills and I want to foster the ability to identify which methods are required for each question. I like to teach in fun ways so hopefully that…
Hilario
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Hilario

Info Processing Tutor Meadowbank, NSW
Understanding how young adults learn will be helpful in teaching and learning. Being able to identify individual strengths and weaknesses, develop strengths and remediate underdeveloped strength Formal education in teaching has given me the opportunity to gain significant understanding of 21st century…

Local Reviews

Jason is really good and Nick is finding him very helpful.
Nicole, Regents Park

Inside Regents ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Tom worked through algebraic techniques such as expanding and simplifying by factorising expressions, along with revision of indices and powers of zero.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Olivia focused on coordinate geometry by finding gradients between points and revising congruency proofs using triangles.

For Year 10, Ethan completed lessons on surds—including rationalising denominators—and practiced applying index laws to simplify complex expressions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 3 and 4 maths, some students often relied on mental calculations rather than writing out working; as one tutor observed, "he needs to practice doing his working out on paper rather than in his head." This habit made it harder to catch small errors with fractions and perimeter.

By Year 7, a pattern emerged: homework was sometimes incomplete or rushed, limiting feedback opportunities—"I would like to see his homework completed with more effort… there were quite a few errors that could have been due to lack of understanding or rushing."

In senior years (Year 10/11), confidence issues became pronounced during multi-step algebra and trigonometry problems. Students hesitated when unfamiliar questions arose, doubting their abilities even after correct answers. This hesitation led to missed marks under exam pressure, especially when layout was messy or shortcuts were taken in working—forcing time-consuming backtracking mid-test.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Regents Park noticed a Year 10 student who used to rush through algebra now taking extra care with each step—he's started writing out his full working and catching mistakes himself.

Another high schooler recently surprised herself by walking the tutor through a challenging probability problem aloud, a big change from her earlier hesitation to explain her thinking.

In primary, one student who always guessed at perimeter questions was able to calculate the perimeter independently for the first time this week.

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 Regents Park Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Regents Park Public School.