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Tutors in Royal Park include a mathematics lecturer with over a decade of senior school experience, seasoned primary and secondary teachers holding multiple education degrees, an ATAR 97.9 achiever and academic scholarship recipient, award-winning university students in STEM, specialist tutors for Years 1–12 (including those with learning difficulties), and Olympiad-certified maths educators.

Vanessa
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Vanessa

Psychology Tutor Seaton, SA
I think that the most important things that a tutor should have when teaching students is to dedicate as much Time as possible to the student in order to understand the tasks they are required to do. Patience is also another important thing to have as things take time. Dedication, not giving up on the student, everyone learns at their own…
Jasriem
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Jasriem

Psychology Tutor Beverley, SA
I believe understanding your students' weaknesses and taking your time to get to know them and teach them based on their needs and learning styles will make them want to learn more. The way I make the lesson engaging, enjoyable, and student-specific. Lessons are catered to based on their skills, needs, and learning style. Positive impacts must be…
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Emily
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Emily

Psychology Tutor Prospect, 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…
yujuan
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yujuan

Psychology Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing is help them out and resolved questions undoubtedly. Let them feel affirmation, approval, safe and supportive is also important when teaching. Some students will feel depressed and frustrates when stucked with some questions, so let them feel easy, feel ok, and relax, trust is also imperative. Good relationships with…
Ysabela Beatrice
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Ysabela Beatrice

Psychology Tutor Port Adelaide, SA
I think it is most important for tutors to help students gain confidence in their own abilities regarding school work as this will help them succeed in life. As someone who has also struggled with school when I was younger and has informally tutored other, I think I am an empathetic and patient…
Adam
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Adam

Psychology Tutor Ottoway, SA
As someone who studied Psychology for years, I can say that I did so because I had an excellent teacher for the subject in high school. My English teacher was also very nurturing despite my poor performance and that was an important experience for me. That encapsulates what I think is one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student:…
Lucy
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Lucy

Psychology Tutor Largs Bay, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to empower the individual to believe they can do it. This requires inspiring growth and motivation, as you cannot force someone to learn but only encourage one to try their best. To me, a student's best is always something to be celebrated and from here, I provide support and aid when the…
Lauren
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Lauren

Psychology Tutor Henley Beach, SA
The most important thing in tutoring is ensuring teaching is catered to each individual student. A tutoring session is often set up as a one-on-one session allowing a unique relationship between student and tutor, whereby a tutor can gain a deep understanding of the teaching that works best for a student, and ways that may not work so well. As a…
Arsheen
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Arsheen

Psychology Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to not just help with homework and assignments, but build a solid understanding of key concepts and other basics (especially in maths and science) so that the student is equipped with the knowledge and confidence to tackle a wide range of problems on their own. I think one of my…
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…

Local Reviews

She has been wonderful and very supportive, patient and understanding of my daughters needs.
Shelly, Royal Park

Inside Royal ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Maddison practised fractions, multiplication and division, as well as using the gradient formula to plot points on a graph.

For Year 9, John reviewed negative indices and learned how to draw exponential functions and their reflections using graphs.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Lucy worked through trigonometric ratios and applied these skills to solve angles of elevation and depression problems with real-world examples.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student regularly avoided writing out steps in algebra, preferring mental calculations—"too much mental maths; she needs to learn to write out each step as she goes"—which led to confusion with negatives and hidden sign errors.

In Year 9, one student admitted to not practicing assigned work at all last week; this meant new concepts weren't reinforced between sessions.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 learner forgot both her homework and word list, leaving key spelling and maths tasks untouched during the lesson. As a result, valuable time was spent on catch-up rather than advancing skills or confidence.

Recent Achievements

A Royal Park tutor recently saw a Year 11 student move from making frequent errors with SOHCAHTOA triangles to now checking her work more carefully and talking through each step aloud—something she used to rush.

Another high schooler, after struggling with compound area problems, started double-checking her solutions as she worked and caught mistakes herself without prompting.

Meanwhile, in primary sessions, one student who was hesitant about reading clocks now confidently reads analogue times and has begun subtracting fractions independently.

In her latest session, she finished all the clock-based questions on her own for the first time.

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 Civic Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Hendon Primary School.