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Richmond's tutors feature a Physics gold medallist and university demonstrator, a doctoral-level research fellow in science, seasoned maths and English mentors with school and Kumon experience, accomplished high-ATAR graduates, peer reading coaches, award-winning engineering students, Byju's-trained group tutors, and multilingual educators skilled at guiding K–12 learners of all backgrounds.

Mohammad
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Mohammad

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are providing personalized guidance, building confidence, clarifying concepts, and offering regular feedback and support. My strengths as a tutor include a genuine passion for teaching and a strong command of the subject matter. I am patient, adaptable, and skilled at tailoring my approach to…
Rajshree
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Rajshree

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student extend beyond academic instruction. While helping students grasp challenging concepts is crucial, equally vital is fostering a supportive and encouraging learning environment. A tutor should adapt teaching methods to suit the student's unique learning style, provide constructive feedback, and…
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Joshua
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Joshua

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make a student enjoy the subject that they are teaching. This will give the students a bigger incentive to try and learn the subject for their self, as well as have more fun and eagerness in learning the subject. I try and cater more towards the things that my students are not as good at,…
Walter
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Walter

Economics Tutor Edwardstown, SA
Guide them to new understanding of concepts they still need to grasp. Ensuring that they make links between concepts over different disciplines. Setting an example of being an outstanding life long student. My strengths are: flexibility broad knowledge of various topics Acquired by my many years of formal study Patience Results…
Arita
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Arita

Economics Tutor Bowden, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is build a students confidence while helping them improve academically. Never get tired of questions. A good tutor should be patient, encouraging, and able to personalise lessons to a students individual needs. Creating a comfortable learning environment where students feel safe asking questions…
Wilfred
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Wilfred

Economics Tutor Parkside, SA
Other than imparting the lessons in school, I think being able to empathize with the students is key in effective teaching. As a matter of strategy, what I will do is to meet them where they are academically, then prepare a plan and implement it to be able to meet our goal(s). I have the ability to relate with young kids well. Raising three…
Christy Jeevan
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Christy Jeevan

Economics Tutor Beverley, SA
The best thing a tutor can do for a student is to assess their interest, strong and weak points and guide them to help them decide what field/specialization they want to seem themselves in. Marks and grades albeit very important and not the defining factors for their future. They have to see for themselves what they are passionate about and a…
Pragyan
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Pragyan

Economics Tutor Kidman Park, SA
To help make concepts clear by focusing on the nitty gritties and translating the problems by breaking them down but by bit for easier learning. Good communication skill, Using concepts and not just parroting…
Anupriya
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Anupriya

Economics Tutor Plympton Park, SA
A tutor can essentially make or break a student. She can enhance the self confidence of the student which will be beneficial for the student throughout their career. Apart from enhancing their knowledge, she enhances the student's social skills, their problem solving abilities and prepares them for tackling real life problems. Through face to…
Difan
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Difan

Economics Tutor Park Holme, SA
The most important things a tutor can do could be split into two parts. Academically, tutors are there to help the student to learn all the knowledge required for them to achieve better grades. Spiritually, tutors are there as mentors, which they need to encourage the student to achieve their full potential, because usually due to exam pressure,…
Ma Angelica
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Ma Angelica

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
Understanding the child's behaviour and adopting learning styles to it. I am a mother myself to a seven year old so I have a better understanding with their behaviour. And i am passionate with teaching as I used to teach keyboard playing to…
Parth
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Parth

Economics Tutor Dulwich, SA
a. Individualized Approach: Tailor the tutoring sessions to suit the student's unique learning style, strengths, and weaknesses. b. Building Confidence: Help students believe in their abilities and instill a growth mindset to overcome challenges. c. Patience and Empathy: Be patient with the student's progress, understanding that everyone…
Gagandeep
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Gagandeep

Economics Tutor Norwood, SA
Helping students achieve their potential, adapting to kid's individual needs, building lasting relationships based on shared goals these are some of the impacts of a tutor on the student. But the most incredible aspect of tutoring is that it merges education and what is usually called enrichment. A good tutor can combine subjects in…
Winston
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Winston

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
For me, the important thing that I can do for my students is helping them to build confidence. I guess most students tend to hire tutors not because they are not good at the subject somehow, but because they lack confidence and interest in it. Therefore, what I can do is to activate their interests and build up confidence in my way. There are…
Xingyu
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Xingyu

Economics Tutor Fullarton, SA
A tutor needs to always be supportive. A student needs a tutor because (s)he wants help. Sometimes not getting a good result can be frustrating for them. A tutor needs to make sure that the students are motivated to improve. I'm good at understanding why the students are stuck, whether it is not knowing how to apply a formula or weak algebraic…
Chloe
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Chloe

Economics Tutor Dulwich, SA
Improving their overall problem-solving and critical thinking skill, guiding them to be a successful and individual learner while establishing a positive learning environment and relationship between tutor and students. The most important part is to let them achieve their short-term goals and then long-term goals. - My distinction GPA (>80%) at…
John
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John

Economics Tutor Prospect, SA
Apart from imparting knowledge, a good tutor should be able to make the student fall in love with the subject. This will guide the student to understand the topic better and most importantly relate it to practical scenarios. Further, a tutor plays a decisive role in unraveling the hidden potential of a student. Not everyone is meant to be a math…
Brandon
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Brandon

Economics Tutor Medindie, SA
The most important things are making sure the student stays focused, this can breed into their own self study by helping to build healthy habits and training themselves to focus for extended periods of time. The 2nd is helping students develop a clear path of reasoning which allows them to solve any problem they face. Being able to communicate…
Priyanka
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Priyanka

Economics Tutor Prospect, SA
a tutor first needs to understand the capability of the student considering all the strengths and weakness and work on it. Only just transforming knowledge will not help the child grow but instead develop a liking for that particular subject will make that child understand it more easily. Temporary teaching does't work in this teaching field.…
Timothy
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Timothy

Economics Tutor Myrtle Bank, SA
The goal of tutoring should be to empower students and thus the primary focus of tuition should be to develop confidence and independence rather than reliance. For this reason, I believe the most important component of tutoring is not working through content, but reflecting and future planning to ensure the student believes they have the skills…
Youting
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Youting

Economics Tutor Toorak Gardens, SA
I think the most important thing is help students understand concepts and build confidence. A tutor should be patient, supportive, and able to adapt to the student’s needs. Creating a positive and comfortable learning environment is also very important, so students feel encouraged to learn. The goal is to help students become more confident and…
Angelina
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Angelina

Economics Tutor Glenside, SA
I believe it is important to understand the student's weaknesses and strengths before starting to teach them. I have come across a common problem with students, which is that they often jump straight into trying to solve a problem without fully understanding the theory/basics first. Hence, I try to first help them understand the basics then go…
reema
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reema

Economics Tutor Henley Beach, SA
Be honest as this helps to establish rapport and trust, the two most critical elements to a successful tutoring relationship. The tutor-student relationship should be viewed as a partnership. You are not there to take the place of the instructor. Let the student know you are there to work with her to supplement classroom and individual study. #…

Local Reviews

We have absolutely loved having Val as our tutor and we have seen improvement in our daughter school work as a result of our sessions.
Kylie, Richmond

Inside RichmondTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Alice explored trigonometry concepts and practised solving linear equations, working through diagrams to visualise problems.

In Year 10, Ethan focused on exam revision by tackling questions on compound interest and financial maths calculations, building confidence with past test examples.

Meanwhile, Year 6 student Chloe strengthened her understanding of equivalent fractions and learned to convert between fractions and decimals using step-by-step practice activities.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 maths, one student's notes reveal that unclear assignment instructions and messy written work made it difficult to track what needed to be done; "Sheets and books were quite messy/disorganized—fixing this may help her keep track of instructions and tasks."

Meanwhile, a Year 9 student struggled with extracting information from graphs and tables during probability work, which slowed progress on worded questions.

In Year 7, motivation flagged during new topics, leading to slow starts and forgotten connections between lessons.

For several students across Years 8–10, practice was limited mostly to familiar question types rather than tackling more challenging or unfamiliar problems.

Recent Achievements

One Richmond tutor noticed a big shift in Tia's approach to trigonometry—after struggling with labelling triangle sides in earlier tests, she now identifies hypotenuse, opposite, and adjacent correctly without help, even catching her own mistakes mid-problem.

In another session, Molly brought questions she'd found tough in class and, after some prompting, worked through multi-step worded problems independently—something she hesitated to try on her own before.

Meanwhile, Natalia showed new self-reliance by spotting when she'd missed parts of a maths question and correcting herself 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 City of West Torrens Public Library Service—or at your child's school (with permission), like Sports College South Australia - West Adelaide Football Club.