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Tutors in Seacombe Gardens include a 15-year veteran educator and early childhood coordinator, an English teacher with a Master's in TESOL and university lecturing experience, a Flinders medical student and accomplished science tutor, postgraduate maths specialists, Olympiad participants, seasoned K–12 private tutors, youth mentors, sports coaches, and high-achieving university scholars across STEM and humanities.

Praneetha
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Praneetha

Geography Tutor South Plympton, SA
“I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to build their confidence, make learning clear and enjoyable, and help them develop independent learning skills. A good tutor doesn’t just teach content — they help the student believe in their ability to succeed.†“My strengths as a tutor are patience, clear…
Shannon
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Shannon

Geography Tutor Lynton, SA
A tutor's most important responsibility is to assist students in developing their skills by engaging them, encouraging them and instilling their students with confidence. Support, clear and consistent instruction, and adaptability to different ways of learning are crucial to ensure students feel secure and are able to reach their potential. Belief…
1st Lesson Trial

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Jacqueline
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Jacqueline

Geography Tutor Clarence Gardens, SA
Very important to show you believe in their ability but letting them also know that sometimes perserverance is required. As a tutor, you are part of their team to help them succeed. Everyone is able to learn and it is important to ensure the tutor is teaching at a level appropriate to the student's level of understanding. Patience and being able…
Ajnish
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Ajnish

Geography Tutor Plympton, SA
Patience is needed to be a successful tutor. Also, passion should be there. A tutor can always go for application based approach and giving examples of where the teaching syllabus can be applied to in real world. I can tutor in easy way and make student visualize in a way to solve the questions adeptly. I can repeat the ways until it is…
Alistair
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Alistair

Geography Tutor Cumberland Park, SA
Just be student focussed. Make them think for themselves. It took me a long time in my personal education journey to learn this, but once I learnt it, I make sure my students don't make the mistake of learning passively. They need to get involved, think for themselves, and this way they'll not only retain what they learn, but grow more broadly…
Ryanddi
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Ryanddi

Geography Tutor Kurralta Park, SA
I believe understanding and problem solving to be the most important things because when a tutor can make the student understand the problem and solve it the problem is together with them. It gave a lot advantages for them during their study and even in their daily life Ability to connect with children easily on a personal level which helps me to…
Sethulakshmi
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Sethulakshmi

Geography Tutor Unley Park, SA
The primary thing a tutor can/ must do for a student is to understand them. Give them the freedom to express their doubts and curiosity, so that they can develop more. Also never compare them with others, always try to make them their better version. Secondly, being a friend to your student can make a huge difference in the way of learning. It…
Sanjay Shah
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Sanjay Shah

Geography Tutor Richmond, SA
As a tutor, I think the most important thing he can do is listen. Listening closely to the student will help him assess the student's level and understanding, and he can prepare his teaching material accordingly. A tutor should also provide feedback to the student's performance and set targets for him to achieve. Another key skill a tutor should…
Thea
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Thea

Geography Tutor Malvern, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is give students the skills to work through problems on their own. Mathematics is all about problem solving which many students struggle to do because they don't have the foundation of skills to know what solutions to reach for. A good tutor starts at the base of the students skills and gives them a strong…

Local Reviews

After using a tutor online we opted to try Ezymathtutoring and Damien has been great. Our son has expressed how he finds it easier to have someone present rather than online and damien is easy to talk to.
scott, Dover Gardens

Inside Seacombe GardensTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Emily worked on understanding place value up to millions and decimal numbers to hundredths, as well as developing skills with equivalent fractions.

Year 8 student Thomas practiced applying the chain, product, and quotient rules for differentiation, along with finding equations of tangents to curves in calculus.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Jack revised statistics topics including normal and binomial distributions and z-scores, using calculator functions for probability questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 4 maths, one student repeatedly lost focus during subtraction and "tried to direct the conversation to other things," making it hard to consolidate number concepts.

Another in Year 9 struggled with using class notes effectively—"needs to develop better note taking habits"—which limited recall when revising surds and logs for tests.

A Year 11 student often skipped writing full steps in differentiation, causing confusion: "He rushed rearranging formulas and missed negatives."

Meanwhile, a Year 7 learner sometimes forgot materials or left homework incomplete, which slowed progress on fraction conversions.

Each scenario saw confidence dip after mistakes, leading to reluctance tackling unfamiliar problems.

Recent Achievements

One Seacombe Gardens tutor noticed a big change in a Year 11 student who used to just follow calculus formulas, but now explains why z-scores work before jumping into answers.

Another high schooler, Stephen, was hesitant with exam practice at first but has started working through harder questions mostly on his own—he even caught himself using the right formula without being prompted.

In primary years, Jye's reading sessions show he now uses word attack skills when stuck on tricky words instead of guessing, which is a huge step from his earlier reluctance to try unfamiliar texts.

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 Cultural Centre Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Stella Maris Parish School.