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

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Semaphore Park's tutors include a seasoned high school maths teacher and faculty head, an ATAR 99.35 Dux with top awards in maths and sciences, a SACE merit scholar (ATAR 99.4) and experienced youth mentor, primary-to-HSC specialists with Olympiad credentials, university students in STEM fields, and dedicated peer coaches and camp leaders passionate about education.

Shahzeb
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Shahzeb

Info Processing Tutor Seaton, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student include: Understanding and Empathy: Listening to students' concerns, understanding their unique learning styles, and showing empathy. This helps create a positive and supportive environment. Feedback and Encouragement: Offering constructive feedback on assignments, quizzes, and progress.…
Karl
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Karl

Info Processing Tutor St Clair, SA
To boost the student's self-esteem and confidence in tackling problem-solving situations to achieve personal development and academic progress. Also, to help them pursue their field of interest and career ambitions. Forming professional yet friendly connections with students, parents, and peers allows me to better understand their challenges,…
1st Lesson Trial

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Prakriti
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Prakriti

Info Processing Tutor Taperoo, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are teach the difficult topics as simply as possible by providing examples for each topic, which makes it easy for the student to remember and understand. Also, a tutor should be someone who understands their students' needs, behaviour, and learning pace, and be flexible in their teaching…
Patrick
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Patrick

Info Processing Tutor Devon Park, SA
I believe a tutor should not only help a student academically but also boost their confidence and foster a love for learning. A good tutor builds trust and encourages independent thinking that will equip students with the tools and mindset they need to succeed for the long-term. My strengths are that I am patient, the ability to break down…
Krisha
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Krisha

Info Processing Tutor Blair Athol, SA
As a tutor, when you spend time listening to your students, you start building a relationship with your student. Then, I can begin personalising the learning plan accordingly to the student's needs, interests and strongest points. As a tutor, you have many strengths, the strength to fully understand your students' weaknesses, and then work…
Jan
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Jan

Info Processing Tutor Albert Park, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is practicing patience and empathy, and providing positive reinforcement to encourage continuous improvement. I believe that my greatest strengths lie in my patience and empathy. By being patient, I can provide the necessary support and encouragement needed to help students grasp challenging…
KwaiLing
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KwaiLing

Info Processing Tutor Woodville, SA
Other than just teaching the book knowledge, tutor can educate the students( not just make them literate) which normally we don't get from books. Care and support, understanding( not too strict nor too lenient)which the students need in their academic life, making them realise that some one is always there anytime they need. 1) I know multiple…
Brent
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Brent

Info Processing Tutor Seaton, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for one of their students is to appear approachable so the student is not afraid to ask questions or for further insight. I believe that my strengths as a tutor is that I can simplify advanced concepts in mathematics or physics by using analogies and demonstations to help the student understand the more…
Archie
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Archie

Info Processing Tutor Henley Beach South, SA
In my opinion the important thing a tutor can do is genuinely see things from the student's perspective. Knowledge can often create blind spots. What feels instinctive to someone experienced, is often not communicated clearly to someone learning it for the first time. My greatest strength is adaptability. I can read what a student needs in the…

Local Reviews

Chloe is lovely and my daughter felt comfortable with her from day one. She has done a lot of preparation in her own time too, providing many examples for Chanelle which I did not expect.
Kelly

Inside Semaphore ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Maddison discussed her struggles with division, fractions, and algebra, and set a goal to improve her grades this year.

Year 10 student worked on expanding and factorising expressions, using practice questions to build confidence.

A Year 11 student focused on calculus by sketching first and second derivatives, clarifying challenging concepts from previous lessons.

Recent Challenges

Several students across Years 3–12 showed organization and process obstacles that impacted progress.

In Year 8, one student was unable to complete homework after misplacing her question sheet; "she lost her questions," noted the tutor, which led to extra time spent catching up in-session instead of extending skills.

A senior student (Year 11) forgot about an upcoming quiz entirely, missing a valuable chance for targeted revision.

Another high schooler frequently relied on mental calculations for circle problems but avoided writing steps—"too much mental maths," observed the tutor—resulting in confusion when signs or sectors were missed mid-problem.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Semaphore Park recently saw a Year 9 student shift from guessing to asking for help when stuck on trigonometry problems—she now talks through her steps aloud and checks her work, which wasn't happening before.

In Year 11, another student began reviewing past quiz mistakes without prompting and now actively requests returned tests to target weak spots.

Meanwhile, one younger primary student who'd struggled with spelling has started bringing homework every week and just achieved her first perfect score on a spelling test after connecting sounds to words during lessons.

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 West Lakes Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Portside Christian College.