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Private science tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit Guarantee
100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Silkstone's tutors include a Senior Cambridge mathematics teacher with over six years' classroom expertise and postgraduate degrees, a Queensland-registered school teacher with more than a decade of experience across maths, science, and learning support roles, an ATAR 99.45 graduate and former Maths Ambassador, plus seasoned private tutors and youth mentors in STEM, English, and primary education.

Cyrus
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Cyrus

Science Tutor Redbank Plains, QLD
the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is give them confidence in a subject they had no prior confidence in my strengths as tutor range for being a very patient individual that’s very understanding to being a great explainer of concepts and…
Ankur
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Ankur

Science Tutor Redbank Plains, QLD
Be calm and smiley with student. A tutor under any circumstances shouldn't criticize the student instead be positive to him. Give them challenging task to overcome their weaker areas. Be imaginative with student. Always listen to student very calmly and behave more like a friend. Most importantly never ever a tutor should laugh and scold his…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Science

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Noah
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Noah

Science Tutor South Ripley, QLD
Being able to help them find their rhythm in studying and learning. Making a subject easier to learn by simplifying concepts and condensing topics. Being patient with my students and understanding of how the most efficient learning method varies from student to…
Sunil
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Sunil

Science Tutor Augustine Heights, QLD
Empower encourage and motivate Listening, Teaching skills, Understanding of multisensory teaching…
Jiya
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Jiya

Science Tutor Mount Crosby, QLD
The most important things include spreading kindness and compassion to a student, encouraging them to take their time while solving problems or understanding a concept. It is also important to realise that additional help may be required, and more time may be spent on a specific concept. They should not lose their patience and give up on teaching…
Armaan
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Armaan

Science Tutor Bellbowrie, QLD
I think the single most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help them develop an intrinsic passion for the content they study, and to assist them in finding methods of learning that make it easier for them to learn. I would rather not spoon-feed answers unless it is absolutely necessary, and would rather a student think critically…

Local Reviews

Isabella was really nice and polite and the girls warmed up to her quickly.
Leah, Silkstone

Inside SilkstoneTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Charlie worked on long division with remainders and used the split strategy for multiplication, also practising multiplying by tens, hundreds, and thousands.

In Year 8, Jacob focused on applying the Pythagorean theorem to solve right-angled triangle problems and practised finding trigonometric ratios (sin, cos, tan) using a calculator.

For Year 9, Emily revised surface area calculations for prisms and cylinders and learned to use the sine rule to solve non-right-angled triangle problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student tackling trigonometry often relied on familiar, easier problems for revision, rather than attempting mixed or challenging questions—this limited deeper retention and confidence with unfamiliar tasks.

In a Year 4 session, one student struggled to maintain focus during multi-step word problems and lost track of working when numbers became larger; as a tutor noted, "she needed frequent reminders to stay on task near the end."

Missed homework in Year 6 meant less opportunity to consolidate new strategies.

By the end of several lessons, students' written work became messier and harder to follow as fatigue set in, leading to more repeated errors and confusion.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Silkstone noticed a big shift with Connor, a high school student who previously doubted his abilities but solved complex trigonometry word problems entirely on his own and even completed all homework questions correctly—something he hadn't managed before.

Another secondary student, Max, overcame initial hesitation in tackling trigonometry and, after some guidance, was soon working through angle problems independently.

Meanwhile, Isla (Year 3) has started to take real initiative during lessons: she now asks to revisit topics she struggled with and can explain her strategies for subtraction without prompting.

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 Ipswich Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Silkstone State School.