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Tutors in St Peters include a university medallist in physics and maths (ATAR 98.5), a 25-year veteran English teacher and HSC marker, an award-winning chemical engineering PhD, experienced K–12 maths and science tutors, peer mentors, public speaking champions, programming and calculus specialists, plus compassionate educators with expertise supporting diverse learning needs.

Tala
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Tala

Psychology Tutor Tempe, NSW
Inspire a genuine passion for the subject, rather than just learning for the sake of school. When students find enjoyment and appreciation in what they're studying, learning becomes easier, and this mindset will benefit them with anything they need to learn in the future. Patience and making learning fun. I take the time to understand each…
Shreya
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Shreya

Psychology Tutor Camperdown, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to truly understand the student and make them feel supported and comfortable. It's crucial to identify where the student is struggling and where they need support, as well as recognizing their potential. Tailoring the teaching approach to suit the individual needs of each student is key, as I…
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tsitsi
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tsitsi

Psychology Tutor Camperdown, NSW
help them realise they can understand any problem. everything looks hard before you have a solution but once you see it, it's incredibly clear. you just need to keep trying. my positivity, patience and motivation. no one student is more capable than another it's just a matter of finding a way to get them to enjoy what their learning and realise…
Kristen
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Kristen

Psychology Tutor Wolli Creek, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be flexible in the way they teach for each individual student to maximise their learning. This is what I strive to do. As your tutor I will be be passionate and committed about your students learning. Additionally, I am highly organised, have good time management skills, and will put…
Tian
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Tian

Psychology Tutor Glebe, NSW
Individualized Support: Every student has unique strengths, weaknesses, and learning styles. As a tutor, it is essential to provide individualized support tailored to the specific needs of each student. This involves understanding their learning preferences, identifying areas for improvement, and adapting teaching strategies to maximize their…
Isabella
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Isabella

Psychology Tutor Kensington, NSW
I think the most important thing may be to identify the individual needs of the student. During my work as an educational-psychological advisor, I used to write detailed reports outlining the student's strengths, learning style, and goals. When this was followed up, it made a very positive impact on the student's learning outcomes. I believe that…
Arina
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Arina

Psychology Tutor Randwick, NSW
A tutor can notice the student's strength and nourish it through a structured set of activities that the student can do in class as well as independently. A tutor can also notice the areas of student's weaknesses and supply the student with a learning program that can tackle these weaknesses gradually and methodically. Additionally, a tutor is a…
Tenglun
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Tenglun

Psychology Tutor Sydney, NSW
Personal relationships are foundational to student success -- the more connected a student feels to his or her tutor, the more the tutor creates trust and respect, essential ingredients for students to learn well. I am an expert in Math and Programming and their academic content -- I know the subject's concepts, ideas and problems inside out. I…
George
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George

Psychology Tutor Wollstonecraft, NSW
To me, the most essential role a tutor can fulfill is that of an enabler and empowerer. I believe a tutor's primary goal should be to provide students with a strong foundation of knowledge and a resilient problem-solving framework, not only to tackle academic challenges but also to navigate any obstacle life may present. An empowering tutor equips…
Alison
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Alison

Psychology Tutor Bondi Beach, NSW
I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student are listening to them and paying attention to their needs. Students can be shy and may not make it abundantly clear what they need in any given moment, but there are usually signs, though they may be subtle. It is a tutor's job to monitor the student throughout a lesson and make sure…
Angelica
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Angelica

Psychology Tutor Erskineville, NSW
Have things prepared, remember where I left off with a student, being patient and altering my technique according to their style of learning and progress. Obviously building a rapport with the student and making them feel secure in their learning. I have been in the students shoes. I understand what it is like to need a tutor as I hired one when I…
Ana
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Ana

Psychology Tutor Mascot, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is not just provide the student with the knowledge that they need for a course or for a test but that they can learn along the way the methods which help them learn best so they can apply those methods to future challenges. In other words, how they figure out one problem or completing one task…
Dharani
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Dharani

Psychology Tutor Wolli Creek, NSW
As a tutor, I aim to explore needs of every student to provide individually-tailored teaching in uncovering students' maximum potential. Aside from merely imparting knowledge, I believe it highly important to consistently motivate students who lack interest in studies, yet also preventing students from becoming over-stressed to the extent of…
Fadzai
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Fadzai

Psychology Tutor Glebe, NSW
To reveal the simple nature of (what may seem) complex. Once a student understands that they have the ability to unravel something they thought was out of their reach, their confidence and newfound ability create a framework for smart study skills and eagerness to learn in the future. Those two qualities are necessary for the independent learning…
Ningyue
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Ningyue

Psychology Tutor Ashfield, NSW
The most important thing is to be genuine. To have the heart and the passion to explain our hobbies and our knowledge to our future generation. Without genuinity, everything else would not matter. I like to think outside the box. I think creating interesting yet simple scenarios for tutoring would enable students to be alert yet understanding.…
Nicole
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Nicole

Psychology Tutor Wollstonecraft, NSW
A good tutor should help their student develop a love for what they are learning. When this is done successfully, this has a knock-on effect on the student's results as they are more engaged with the content they are learning. This starts with the tutor being passionate about the content they are teaching and being determined to push the student…
Shourya
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Shourya

Psychology Tutor Neutral Bay, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is truly understand them. By this I mean understand who they are as a person and as a student. This allows you to achieve clarity on weaknesses, goals, ambitions and drive to understand allowing you to adjust your teaching style and content to align with their preferences. I think my biggest…

Local Reviews

Darren is a great tutor and I'm extremely happy. Fletcher has made amazing progress in the few lessons that he had had. Fletcher likes Darren and is comfortable with his teaching style.
Rachael, Marrickville

Inside St PetersTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Scarlett practised breaking up four- and six-digit numbers in non-standard ways to build place value understanding, and explored how rearranging digits changes number size.

Year 11 student Sam worked through algebra basics, graphing linear equations, and used the law of cosines to solve trigonometry problems involving similar triangles.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Ella focused on quadratic equations—factoring and solving—and applied her knowledge to real-world contexts like calculating tax and depreciation.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student expressed feeling overwhelmed by multi-step word problems, often unsure how to break them down; as one tutor noted, "she stated that she is often overwhelmed at all the information given to her."

In Year 10, missing key details in finance and algebra questions led to incomplete answers—skipped questions on a practice test remained unattempted until prompted.

For Year 11, not reviewing all test topics resulted in missed easy marks in rates and ratios, simply because those areas were set aside.

When reading exam questions too quickly in senior years, students lost points from overlooked instructions or misapplied formulas.

Recent Achievements

In Year 11, Kiera had struggled to confidently set up algebraic equations, but she filled out an entire interest table on her own after just a bit of prompting—she even tackled several practice test questions she'd previously avoided and got half of them right without guessing.

Raphael (Year 7) used to need help for every step with algorithms; now he completes most questions solo and explains his reasoning clearly when asked.

Meanwhile, Scarlett in Year 3 has started asking how to spell unfamiliar words instead of skipping them, showing new initiative during writing tasks.

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 St Peters / Sydenham Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Peters Public School.