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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in St Andrews include a seasoned HSC mathematics mentor and school STEM awardee, experienced K–12 tutors with advanced subject expertise, a Maths Olympiad distinction recipient, peer leaders from top schools, and university scholars in engineering, medicine, science and linguistics—many with first-in-cohort or academic honors, youth leadership roles, and coaching experience.

Wali
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Wali

Tutor St Andrews, NSW
Understand their perspective and talk to them. Understand the strengths of students and minimise their weakness. Building with students on 1-1 basis. Communicating with parents on the progress of a student and work out a solution. Building strong relationship with students Being able to communicate with students. Being able to express my…
Rameses
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Rameses

Tutor St Andrews, NSW
It is important that tutors not only foster improvement but also a passion for the subject being taught. As such, I believe that tutoring should be an enjoyable and enriching experience. It is also important that the tutor examines the tutee's strengths and weaknesses and acts accordingly. An awareness that every student is different allows…
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Shekinah Noshir
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Shekinah Noshir

Tutor Gregory Hills, NSW
A tutor is an important role and a mentor. Students select tutors because they have the enthusiasm to learn and perhaps do not have the resources needed which a tutor can fill in. I am calm, patient and have an insight to give my best so that people can benefit from me. I want children to excel and do well beyond they can dream…
Attanayake
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Attanayake

Tutor Bradbury, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for their student is understand the nuances of learning capabilities and teach them in a manner that is both convenient and accessible to their minds. Different students have different styles of learning that cater to their needs best, that is why it is of utmost importance for a tutor to…
Elif
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Elif

Tutor Prestons, NSW
Patience and a positive reward system. It is very important to give the students time to let new concepts cement in their minds. It always helps with a reward system Determination and understanding. No matter how difficult the topic is or if they don't understand it at all, I can explain it 50 times over in 50 different…
Lina
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Lina

Tutor Spring Farm, NSW
As a tutor, the most important things I can do for a student are to build their confidence, foster a deep understanding of the material, and create a supportive, engaging learning environment. I focus on helping students grasp key concepts by breaking them down into manageable parts, using various teaching methods to suit their learning style. I…
Thaison
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Thaison

Tutor Bardia, NSW
The most important role a tutor can play is showing constant and unconditional support for their student. This is something I've learned from the example of my previous tutor who answered almost every email or text message within the hour within reason. I believe showing this constant support allows the student to trust us as tutors and react more…
Ashwini
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Ashwini

Tutor Oran Park, NSW
I think the most important things a tutor can do are make students feel supported, break concepts down clearly, and help them build real confidence. My experience at McDonalds and Chemist Warehouse taught me patience and problem-solving, while being a Peer Support Leader showed me how powerful encouragement can be. A tutor should help students…
Mohammad
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Mohammad

Tutor Prestons, NSW
Be able to guide them and morally support them. Without motivating a student, your teaching efforts are wasted. I am experienced in teaching myself and my peers. I am also a master at analysing my fellow tutors' teaching methods and applying those strategies to my own. I also have great communication skills through experience with working in peer…
Akanksha
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Akanksha

Tutor Oran Park, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them grow on a daily basis. An important characteristic to take on as a tutor is to listen and communicate effectively with the student in order to help teach material in a way that helps them understand. Building strong relationships with students is something a tutor can do for a…

Local Reviews

She is amazing! Going very well.
Sashi

Inside St AndrewsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Lachlan focused on reading clocks and telling time, as well as practising addition and subtraction problems.

For Year 8, Leon worked through financial maths topics from his textbook, including simple and compound interest calculations.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Vasati completed an exam covering rational numbers to check her understanding, with extra attention on performing operations with whole numbers.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 algebra, one student repeatedly skipped showing steps when simplifying expressions—"he forgot to take out common factors," noted a tutor—leading to repeated sign errors and confusion during homework.

A Year 11 learner, while working on trigonometry and coordinate geometry, struggled to graph equations independently and hesitated to check calculator results, which slowed problem-solving in exam-style questions.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student left spelling homework incomplete and rarely reviewed corrections, so persistent errors reappeared in weekly tests.

In all cases, missing practice or not taking up feedback meant time was spent revisiting old mistakes rather than building new skills.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in St Andrews noticed a big shift with one Year 9 student who, after weeks of hesitating to speak up, started explaining his reasoning out loud during geometry questions—something he'd always avoided.

In Year 7 maths, another student who previously rushed through her reading now pauses and self-corrects when she stumbles on tricky words, showing more patience instead of guessing.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student made clear progress by independently translating worded problems into algebraic expressions without prompting, a task that had caused confusion just a few sessions earlier.

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 Greg Percival Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Andrews Public School.