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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tennyson's tutors include a university med student with top 3% global exam results and youth mentoring experience, an award-winning school prefect and English tutor, experienced maths and science mentors, seasoned peer leaders in music and sports, plus high-achieving students recognized for academic excellence, dux awards, and leadership across K–12 settings.

Leanne
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Leanne

Info Processing Tutor Brisbane, QLD
the patience, clarity, kindness, dedication Maths PhD with 3 years CSE postdoc experience. Over a decade teaching experience as a senior tutor in 3 Australian universities Qualified at both theory and practical sides of mathematics and software engineering/development. Passion to help young people achieving academic…
Alexis
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Alexis

Info Processing Tutor Jindalee, QLD
The most important things I for a tutor to do is understand and listen to the student. Not listening can be one of the most frustrating things as a student, where the tutor doesn't understand what they actually need help with, and wastes time going over the wrong content in the wrong way. Being able to understand the student, and then properly…
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Richard
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Richard

Info Processing Tutor Bardon, QLD
I feel the most important things a tutor can do is to help a student learn how to learn so that they can be more self-reliant with their study in the future. Helping students to really engage with the subject and to understand the key concepts so that they can teach someone else is what I hope to achieve. Ability to listen to the student and…
Peta
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Peta

Info Processing Tutor Mount Gravatt East, QLD
Care about the student and wanting them to succeed. I am patient and am able to think outside the box, so if a strategy isn't working I am easily able to look for another way of…
Jeremy
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Jeremy

Info Processing Tutor Ashgrove, QLD
A tutor must be patient and listen to how the student feels and explains their material. Without this we can't understand where the gaps are in the students knowledge OR whether they really do understand, but just in a different way. I have infinite patience, I can adjust my communication style, and I when faced with something unfamiliar I have…
Paiwand
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Paiwand

Info Processing Tutor Carina Heights, QLD
The most important things include : - Instilliing a healthy attitude - Being supportive - Being on task - Achieving Goals Together optimising these factors leave little room for failure. My strengths would be Maths and English as I am motivated and fond of those subjects. I also like teaching visually and interactively. Furthermore, my…
Thidaporn (Lukgade)
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Thidaporn (Lukgade)

Info Processing Tutor Mansfield, QLD
To help them with any questions they have and identify their strengths and weaknesses in that subject to help develop and improve on it. I think my strengths are that I am very patient, dependable and willing to learn new things. I think my weaknesses would be that because my study timetable will have to change every semester, the times that I…
Xingyu
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Xingyu

Info Processing Tutor Sunnybank Hills, QLD
Being respectful is one of the best ways to connect with a student, and allows students room to speak up about any issues they are having. Having good management skills will ensure students are taught with well prepared content, and also be heared with appropriate after class learning material to prepare for the next lesson. Very good…
Kyran
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Kyran

Info Processing Tutor Doolandella, QLD
As a tutor is paid to improve a student's grades and so that's the underlying aim. But what a tutor should really do is teach a student how to learn better and improve. That means reminding them to proofread, read the criteria sheet before and after researching, and set up study plans that work with them (if that's palm cards, end of the week…

Local Reviews

10/10 very patient and knowledgeable, I'm a slow learner, and find maths difficult as I am a visual learner. Thank you!
Monique, Indooroopilly

Inside TennysonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Ella practised **multiplication facts (especially 3x, 4x, and 6x tables)** using flash cards and games, worked on reading time to the nearest five minutes in both analogue and digital formats, and completed comprehension activities after reading short non-fiction texts.

Year 7 student Alex focused on **solving equations with unknowns on both sides** using step-by-step algebraic manipulation and reviewed key terminology in geometry through labelled diagrams.

For Year 8, Sophia tackled **writing analytical paragraphs for English essays** by breaking down topic sentences and supporting evidence, then revised ratios and percentage problems in maths with real-world examples.

Recent Challenges

Incomplete homework and lack of focus were frequent hurdles for Elsa (Years 3–6). On several occasions, such as one maths session where "she had trouble with the time questions… and was easily distracted," missing work led to confusion in new concepts.

In English, untidy written work—like forgetting to keep letters on the line or rushing sentences—made it harder to spot spelling errors and slowed progress in writing tasks.

Hesitation to try strategies like talking aloud or using pen and paper persisted: "She is still hesitant to try the strategies."

Distraction crept in often, especially during maths problem-solving or when reading unfamiliar words aloud.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Tennyson noticed that Ella, a primary student who used to rush through her English tasks and make careless spelling mistakes, now slows down when writing and self-corrects her pronunciation—something she avoided before.

In recent high school sessions, one student who previously hesitated to answer maths questions has begun taking more risks, confidently tackling times tables without waiting for reassurance.

Another secondary student recently finished a creative writing piece independently after earlier relying heavily on joint planning, showing real initiative by choosing to finish the story solo.

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 Corinda Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Sebastian's Primary School.