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Riverview's tutors feature a 10-year maths tutoring veteran with a UNSW Dean's Award, an HSC Dux and full academic scholar (ATAR 99.35), experienced peer mentors and school coaches, IB and HSC high achievers in English, maths, and sciences, plus specialist support from university graduates and classroom teachers with proven success guiding K–12 students.

Thomas
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Thomas

Chinese Tutor Marsfield, NSW
The most important things that a tutor can build a personal and strong relationship with their students. Helping them with their learning progress not just only helping them doing their homework. Communication skills also play an important role, by communicating with their parents or guardian how to help the students in their learning process I…
Ningyue
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Ningyue

Chinese Tutor Ashfield, NSW
The most important thing is to be genuine. To have the heart and the passion to explain our hobbies and our knowledge to our future generation. Without genuinity, everything else would not matter. I like to think outside the box. I think creating interesting yet simple scenarios for tutoring would enable students to be alert yet understanding.…
1st Lesson Trial

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Wanjia (Dana)
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Wanjia (Dana)

Chinese Tutor Stanmore, NSW
As a tutor, I think the most important thing is to be patient and responsible with students. For example, providing a timely response or help is essential during learning. It is also important to understand what type of learners your students are and what kind of learning strategies work best for them. Additionally, a good, trusting relationship…
Heather
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Heather

Chinese Tutor Darlington, NSW
As a tutor, the most important thing I can do is to help the student figure out where their confusion is, is it just the question being asked or the logic of how to interpret this question. They may confuse about the original theory they've learned because they can't link it to real life to apply or they didn't see it clearly in the first place,…
Jason
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Jason

Chinese Tutor Killarney Heights, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to establish their confidence, give them the attention, teach the most efficient strategies to succeed in the exam with the least lessons. Students can't succeed in their exam is because there are so-called 'good students' in their class, for multiple reasons, their teachers don't actually…
Lolita
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Lolita

Chinese Tutor Marsfield, NSW
I think the most important things a tutor can do are spark the student’s interest in the subject, explain concepts clearly when something doesn’t make sense, and help remove the fear of making mistakes. When students see that learning is a process of trying, experimenting and eventually finding the answer, they become more confident and open…
Guangyao
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Guangyao

Chinese Tutor Redfern, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make the knowledge interesting and vivid to learn, so the kids will be willing and more importantly, motivated to reflect deeply and grasps the knowledge. I am expertized at the taught knowledge, patient for teaching, and experienced in teaching teenagers and…
Shirley
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Shirley

Chinese Tutor Epping, NSW
To help them understand the knowledge itself, instead of get high scores by constantly doing different types of questions. Truely understanding of knowledge is more efficient than practicing problem solving. I am very patient, when student cannot understand what I am saying, I will think of another way to explain it. And I am good at discovering…
Joanna
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Joanna

Chinese Tutor Ashbury, NSW
A tutor's role extends beyond the lessons and hopefully inspires a student to realise their passion and love for their subjects and learning through establishing and maintaining a supportive teaching environment. A tutor's most important role is to assist students with academic success strategies and teaching them life lessons, whilst also…

Local Reviews

First tutor didn't really suit our needs but this was resolved very quickly and I am now very happy with how things are progressing. If anything, there is probably a little too much communication via email. A monthly newsletter would be better than a series of single subjects as I tend to delete without reading them if I get too many.
Susan, Riverview

Inside RiverviewTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student James practised division strategies and worked on adding and subtracting decimals in money problems.

In Year 10, Sarah revised coordinate geometry with a focus on distance and midpoint calculations, then tackled function transformations using graph sketches.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Ben completed past paper questions involving sequences and series, as well as probability scenarios requiring multi-step reasoning.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Mathematics, a student lost nearly half their marks in a major exam due to repeated "silly errors"—often tied to negative signs and missing steps—despite knowing the underlying concepts. As one tutor observed, "almost 40 out of 80 marks lost due to silly errors."

In Year 7, trouble choosing between operations (addition vs. subtraction) slowed progress on worded problems and led to hesitation when faced with multi-step calculations.

Meanwhile, in primary years, short-term memory lapses with times tables (especially 6–8) meant relying on reference charts instead of mental recall during timed drills, adding pressure mid-task.

Recent Achievements

A Riverview tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who used to make frequent minus sign mistakes in calculus now double-checking his work and catching those slips before finishing.

In Year 8, a student who'd struggled with curve sketching managed to re-apply their understanding of transformations to tackle tougher questions with less hesitation than last month.

Meanwhile, one primary student who could only recall some times tables now completes a full 10x10 grid in under ten minutes—twice as fast as just a few weeks ago.

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 Lane Cove Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Saint Ignatius' College, The Regis Campus.