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Springrange's tutors include a seasoned secondary maths and physics teacher with a Graduate Diploma in Education, a primary and middle years science and maths specialist with six years' classroom experience, experienced English and STEM tutors, early childhood educators with Montessori backgrounds, and high-achieving university students skilled in mentoring, coaching, and engaging K–12 learners.

Vani
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Vani

Info Processing Tutor Bonner, ACT
First and foremost a good listener and to be very patient with the child. Willing to share his experience and make him feel comfortable. Tutor should teach in a way that in future he doesn't requires help and so they instill those executive study skills that will serve the student well in academics and in life. Calm and patient towards child and…
Ragini
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Ragini

Info Processing Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
A tutor should have the ability to share information in a way that others will learn, grasp the concepts, understand the input. A tutor should be able to know strengths and weakness of a student. A extra paper work is required by tutor for better performance of a student. A regular assessment of student to enhance his performance. A tutor should…
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Lalit
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Lalit

Info Processing Tutor Ngunnawal, ACT
That light bulb moment I discussed above. It’s getting the student to unlock that puzzle in their mind and being able to understand the problem at hand. I find that is the true way to learn. Forcing a student to revise work and memorise is not something I found of, hence it’s not something I promote or work by. I’m balanced in both…
John
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John

Info Processing Tutor Bonner, ACT
In my opinion, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide personalized guidance and support, foster a positive learning environment, and encourage critical thinking and independent learning. Tutors should strive to understand their students' unique learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses, and adapt their approach…
Mohammed
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Mohammed

Info Processing Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Being a tutor is a profession of great responsibility, and they are entrusted with their students' future. I consider upholding that trust and guiding the students to what is correct is the number one essential thing for a tutor. Tutors must understand their limitations, and work on how they can function past those hurdles, and enable their…
Yashodha
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Yashodha

Info Processing Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Help them understand concepts rather than just memorising steps, build their confidence so they believe they can tackle problems on their own, and create a positive learning environment where they feel comfortable asking questions and making mistakes. I’m patient and good at explaining concepts in different ways until they make sense. I’m also…

Local Reviews

Bryan is a great tutor for my son. He is really good at explaining key concepts and working on the areas that he most needs. My son enjoys tutoring with Bryan and while it is still early days he is already improving in his grades.
Kate

Inside SpringrangeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Jacob revised key quadratic concepts, working through textbook questions on expanding brackets and factorisation to reinforce his understanding.

Year 8 student Charlotte practised plotting points on Cartesian planes and explored the general form of linear equations, including calculating gradient using both rise/run and coordinate formulas.

For Year 5, William focused on mastering times tables (2x, 3x, 5x) by reciting them aloud before moving on to simple division as the inverse operation.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student was observed relying heavily on a calculator for routine calculations, which slowed progress in algebra and times tables; as one tutor noted, "the more he can guestimate the answer the more likely he can eliminate any extreme errors."

In Year 7 geometry, skipping clear written working—especially when finding unknown angles—led to confusion during multi-step problems.

Meanwhile, a senior student preparing for an algebra test left practice incomplete due to limited time and did not send questions or feedback as suggested.

Each scenario left key gaps unaddressed just before important assessments or topic transitions.

Recent Achievements

One Springrange tutor noticed a Year 9 student who used to wait for hints now asking clarifying questions during algebra, showing real initiative.

Another high schooler made a shift from guessing on probability assignments to working independently and getting the answers right without prompts.

In primary, one student who previously relied heavily on their fingers for addition started solving sums with mental strategies instead.

The same session saw her finish all 100 addition problems within the lesson—something she'd never managed before.

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 Gungahlin Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Aunty Agnes Shea High School.