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Private physics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Sheidow Park's tutors include a seasoned primary and high school teacher with seven years' classroom experience, an assistant professor of mathematics, peer mentors and academic award winners in maths and science, university-trained educators, specialist OSHC and inclusion support staff, plus accomplished private tutors with proven records helping K–12 students thrive across diverse subjects.

Arjun
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Arjun

Physics Tutor Marion, SA
Best way a tutor can do is explain student's doubts in simple way and motivate them in problem solving skills. Better communications with students regarding subject matter and finding the root cause behind the performance can be fruitful. I am good in explaining things. I like to interact with students and I feel much happier when I can share my…
Helen
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Helen

Physics Tutor Eden Hills, SA
I believe one of the most important things a tutor can do is to help the student find confidence that they can achieve, whilst keeping their passion alive for the subject. A tutor is there to help students find the answers so they can realise their full potential. Through my work as a science communicator, I have the ability to alter and tailor my…
1st Lesson Trial

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Janageeth
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Janageeth

Physics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
The best thing a tutor can do to a student is to make the subject more interesting so that the students are motivated to learn more. This in turn has a chain effect on improving the standard of the student. My strengths are the ability to identify the student's needs, flexibility, adapting to the situation and dedication. However, the ability to…
Alex
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Alex

Physics Tutor Noarlunga, SA
The most important aspects of tutoring are: -Being the students friend to improve the communication between student and tutor -Being patient and working with the students strengths and weaknesses -Encouraging the student to motivate them -Helping the student achieve their academic goals though this encoragement -Being understanding and…
Emily
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Emily

Physics Tutor Somerton Park, SA
I believe it is really important that a tutor is able to communicate well, encourage and understand the primary needs of their students. The tutor should then be able to think of many different and useful strategies to help the student learn. It is very important the tutor brings a sense of fun to the lesson, to urge the student to want to learn…
Suresh
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Suresh

Physics Tutor St Marys, SA
Not all students are modelled the same way. Some are able to learn by studying the books while others require a lot of practice. Hence I believe that teaching the student how to study based on his or her strengths is the best thing a tutor can do and I will strive to achieve that at all costs. I spend a lot of time communicating with the student…
Ashleigh
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Ashleigh

Physics Tutor Morphettville, SA
A tutor should motivate students to want to achieve their best and provide them with opportunities and knowledge on how they can achieve this. A tutor should create a supportive learning environment where the student can thrive and feels comfortable to ask questions. A tutor should teach their student/s how to be a self-directed learner, as this…
Jayden
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Jayden

Physics Tutor Glenelg South, SA
I would say the most important thing is connecting with the students and making them feel understood. As long as there's mutual respect, it becomes a lot easier to guide them. I think my largest strength is that I'm able to explain concepts in multiple ways and help visualise the problems. I also have a very firm understanding of many stage 1 and…

Local Reviews

Walter seems to be the perfect fit for Conor, excellent knowledge and teaching skills.
Brian, Sheidow Park

Inside Sheidow ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Emily focused on solving linear equations and identifying perpendicular lines, practicing with both algebraic problems and worded questions.

For Year 10, Josh worked through factorising quadratic expressions using the sum and product method and revisited expanding brackets to strengthen his exam skills.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Grace tackled confidence intervals for means—choosing sample sizes and understanding how sample size affects interval width—and practiced testing statistical claims using real past exam questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, occasionally multiplies when addition is required, and vice versa—this muddled process made working steps harder to follow, especially without clear equals signs.

In a Year 10 geometry session, the student was missing their book of 'mini-theorems' and had to recall details from memory, slowing progress on proofs.

For a Year 12 probability test, emailed materials were sent home because homework was incomplete; revision focused mainly on familiar question types rather than challenging scenarios.

After setbacks in calculus (Year 11), motivation dipped noticeably—time that could have been spent clarifying errors was instead spent quietly re-reading notes.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Sheidow Park noticed one Year 9 student, who previously rushed through algebra and made errors with expanding brackets, now slows down and checks each step—this shift has meant fewer mistakes and more reliable answers.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student who had trouble interpreting worded geometry questions is now able to break them down logically, confidently finding equations of lines using distance formula without prompting.

In a recent session, a senior student independently used their calculator to solve binomial probability problems for the first time, after weeks of needing reminders about the process.

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 Hallett Cove Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Woodend Primary School.