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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit Guarantee
100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Stirling's tutors include a former K–12 science and maths teacher with eight years' classroom experience, an ATAR 99.80 graduate and Australian Maths Competition awardee, experienced Kumon and private tutors for Years 1–12, a seasoned educator with a postgraduate teaching diploma, peer mentors, and university scholars recognised for academic excellence and leadership.

Matthew
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Matthew

Psychology Tutor Doubleview, WA
The important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel more confident about their abilities and knowledge. The more they can back them-self, the more they can be composed in a test environment, the better they perform in test conditions, the better their marks. Like a positive feedback loop, this will also increase confidence;better…
Karen
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Karen

Psychology Tutor Woodlands, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is motivate them and help them realise that they can succeed and help them to really understand the subject and be able to use this understanding to achieve good grades. I think my strengths are being patient and understanding and the ability to tailor explanations to specific students and work…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Jiya
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Jiya

Psychology Tutor Bedford, WA
A tutor is beyond someone that can just teach some topics to students, but they are someone that the student looks upto, and feels comfortable sharing their weaknesses to. It is essential for for the tutor to understand the child’s needs, and cater to those specifically. My strengths are that i have recently graduated high school, so I am very…
Anum
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Anum

Psychology Tutor Nollamara, WA
First of all respect for diversity and sincerity are the key factor to enter in any workforce. Secondly time managment, delivery method, discussion between students and parents, questionnaires to understand their views and observation, proper strategies and course plans are the other important things that every tutor should understand. Thirdly,…
Mikayla
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Mikayla

Psychology Tutor Tuart Hill, WA
Tutors can support their students through building meaningful connections with them, helping students understand how they learn best and how to further their understanding in learning areas. Assisting them in improving their grades by first understanding the student will improve their confidence and self-worth, which I believe to be essential for…
Shannon
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Shannon

Psychology Tutor Dianella, WA
I believe that it is important for a tutor to provide constructive but fair feedback to their students, while also providing practical advice and support to them, so they can improve in areas where they were originally struggling. I believe that I am a patient and understanding person, who is quite personable and can talk to people easily. I have…
Ishika
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Ishika

Psychology Tutor Inglewood, WA
-Efficient Communication. -Practical knowledge. -Presentable things to be done -Problem Solver -Polite -Interpersonal Skills. My level of communication and makes them familiar with the studies in a friendly way makes my strength, which i think is must in each profession but in teaching it works…
Anthony
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Anthony

Psychology Tutor Northbridge, WA
I believe that instilling self-belief and critical thinking is the most important things a tutor can do for their student. Reflecting on my year 12 as got a score that I felt wasn't enough for medicine (96.00 ATAR), I have learnt to become someone who is collaborative and believes in a growth mindset after my a failure. in Year 12. I believe…
Katherine
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Katherine

Psychology Tutor Northbridge, WA
Listen and teach. I think it is so important for students to be listened to and helped accordingly. They must be given the space to work through problems they are facing themselves so that they can believe in their own abilities and increase their own self-efficacy. It is vital that the student can not only regurgitate an answer or process but…

Local Reviews

It went really well and Harrison was great!
Shani, Innaloo

Inside StirlingTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Bronte focused on trigonometry, including solving worded problems and applying Pythagoras' Theorem in 3D contexts like finding the longest pole that fits inside a rectangular prism.

Year 10 student Cohen worked on sketching and transforming quadratic graphs (translations up/down or left/right), as well as identifying key features of exponential graphs.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Andrew reviewed exponentials and logarithms, practicing algebraic solutions to equations involving these functions ahead of his test.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student recently left several worksheets unfinished for school homework, which led to gaps in understanding two-way tables and Venn diagrams—"worksheets 2–4 from class were uncompleted," as a tutor noted.

In Year 8 maths, one student had only written a single page of notes across three lessons, resulting in most of a practice test being unattempted and unfamiliarity with core content like the five-number summary.

For Year 2 maths, Astrid sometimes overthinks basic subtraction (such as 7 – 1), slowing her down on timed activities and leaving less energy for multi-step problems later in the lesson.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Stirling noticed that a Year 9 student, after previously rushing through tests and missing key steps, has started using "talking aloud" and backchecking strategies—now catching more of his own errors before submitting work.

In a recent session with a senior high school student, the tutor observed her independently completing all calculations for an assignment ahead of time, something she'd struggled to organise on her own just weeks earlier.

Meanwhile, a younger student who once relied heavily on setup help can now solve column addition unaided and subtraction problems up to three digits almost entirely by herself.

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 Osborne Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Balcatta Senior High School.