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Tutors in Symonston include a PhD machine learning scientist with international research awards, a UNSW aerospace engineering graduate and seasoned maths/physics tutor, an experienced primary teacher with a psychology background, university academics, high-achieving STEM undergraduates, early childhood educators, and dedicated mentors with years of hands-on tutoring and coaching for K–12 students.

Sparsh
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Sparsh

Info Processing Tutor Acton, ACT
A tutor can make a student love the subject he/she hates. The most important thing for a tutor is to understand the student, his/her interests, aptitude, and what he/she is inclined towards. If you have a basic idea of the student mindset you can develop techniques to make them understand the subject in a way they don't find it hard. Gamification…
David
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David

Info Processing Tutor Wanniassa, ACT
Provide a stable and consistent source of support in their education, while simultaneously being a person they are under no pressure to impress. Since tutors have no influence over their lives outside of tutoring, students often feel comfortable asking us questions they would feel embarrassed or "dumb" for asking a parent or teacher. Tutors…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Haiyang
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Haiyang

Info Processing Tutor Turner, ACT
I think the most important thing is to teach them how to think in the correct way. For physics and science, understanding is much more important than remembering. Therefore, teaching them to think by themselves is very important for their future academic success. Also, personal interest is another important factor. Teachers should cultivate the…
Ranjana
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Ranjana

Info Processing Tutor Turner, ACT
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for any student is to make them believe in their own capability. Secondly, make them value education and enjoy the process. I break concepts down into small bits and give relevant examples. I focus on concept understanding first and then practice. I have always been one of the top students in school…
Adib
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Adib

Info Processing Tutor Braddon, ACT
Instill confidence by showing how a few examples can be solved. Patient - can convey complex concepts using simple terms. Tutor with over 20 years of teaching…
Anjusree
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Anjusree

Info Processing Tutor Braddon, ACT
A good tutor will identify the student’s learning style so that they are able to present information in a way that has the greatest effect.Tutors should ascertain which building blocks the student is missing in their foundation of knowledge. Filling in these missing building blocks will establish a strong foundation on which they can build.A…
Teresa
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Teresa

Info Processing Tutor Richardson, ACT
The most important things a tutor can do is to always be understanding and patient as some concepts are more challenging to grasp for students. Also being able to communicate in a manner that the student is able to understand and allows for them to progress. My strengths are my understanding nature, patience and my ability to adapt. I believe…

Local Reviews

We would certainly recommend Shreey. My son was very happy with his result in maths methods.
Eu-Kin

Inside SymonstonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Noah worked on reading comprehension and analysis of "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas," alongside grammar exercises on nouns, adverbs, and paragraph structure using Oxford English 8.

For Year 9, Ari focused on statistics topics such as mean, median, mode, box-and-whisker plots, identifying outliers in data sets, and practiced creating various types of graphs including dot plots and pie charts.

Meanwhile, Muhammad (Year 8) developed narrative skills through writing a collaborative crime fiction story for an English assignment—planning characters and scenes—while also building vocabulary specific to the genre.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 English, one student deleted an entire essay after a teacher's format change and missed the chance to email a new draft for feedback—"he did not respond," noted the tutor, leaving editing skills underdeveloped.

A Year 8 maths learner forgot homework and felt overwhelmed after end-of-term exams; this break in routine meant less review of outlier detection steps and graphing neatness.

In senior English (Year 12), another student needed extra support structuring essays but hesitated to share drafts for advice. These moments left gaps in confidence, planning, and skill growth just before key assessments.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Symonston noticed a Year 11 student who previously hesitated to ask for help with essay structure now actively sends drafts and questions about thesis clarity, leading to more concise arguments in Ancient History.

Meanwhile, a Year 9 student struggled with graphical solutions in maths but, after step-by-step guidance on linear equations, tackled previously avoided graph problems without prompting.

For a younger student, scaffolding open-ended writing tasks helped him move from using only prompted vocabulary to finding his own words when answering questions. He finished both writing exercises independently for the first time this term.

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 Kingston Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Narrabundah College.