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

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Torrens Park's tutors include a university-level lecturer with a decade of private tutoring experience, an ATAR 99.95 achiever and junior school mentor, medical and public health scholars, a Headstart scholar and karate instructor for kids, seasoned youth coaches, and accomplished recent graduates with high distinctions in maths, sciences, languages, music, and leadership.

Alex
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Alex

Info Processing Tutor Norwood, SA
I consider the two most important things for a tutor to do are to first inspire confidence in the student and identify the area of difficulty as precisely as possible. Students are generally not equipped to identify the precise area of their difficulty as they don't have the knowledge to fully place it in the context of the subject. By…
Natasha
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Natasha

Info Processing Tutor Trinity Gardens, SA
The most important thing is for a tutor to understand the student and listen to them. They need to accomodate to what the student thinks they need work on, but a tutor should also offer suggestions as well as motivate their student, encouraging them and helping them to be the best they can be. My strengths would be that I am a good motivator and I…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Oskar
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Oskar

Info Processing Tutor Glenelg South, SA
The biggest thing that I can do is instill a perfect, complete understanding of the topic at a conceptual level. Memorizing formulas and techniques is so inefficient, and by instead focusing on conceptual understanding, my students can tackle unfamiliar problems with confidence. My biggest strength would be my adaptable communication skills. I…
Peter
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Peter

Info Processing Tutor St Peters, SA
Listen and give encouragement/positive feedback, while addressing weaknesses. Identifying where someone is going wrong and explaining this in a friendly and respectful manner. Explaining why things are done and why they are done in a certain way/order. Patience. Knowledge. The ability to explain ideas/concepts in simpler, different and relevant…
Phurwa
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Phurwa

Info Processing Tutor Payneham, SA
Instead of focusing on traditional way of teaching, a teacher should be able to spark curiosity. Instead of telling them to write, teacher should tell them how writing makes you think critically. Additionally, teachers should understand that every student is unique and they might have different learning methods which suits them. Education system…

Local Reviews

tutor comes prepared and my daughter feels comfortable with him. tutor writes a report regularly focusing on where she has developed, knowledge gaps that still exist and what she needs to practise.
Diana, Torrens Park

Inside Torrens ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Alex focused on the basics of Pythagoras' Theorem and was introduced to foundational trigonometry and probability concepts.

For Year 11, Emily tackled differentiation from first principles, working through the product, quotient, and chain rules with guided examples.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Sarah concentrated on integration by parts and began applying these techniques to practice problems drawn from recent coursework.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student's written solutions in calculus often lacked clear formatting, making it hard for examiners to follow the logic—one tutor noted, "the setting out needs to be clearer so markers can read it."

In Year 10 algebra, reliance on copying previous problem structures led to repeated sign errors.

A younger student in Year 5 maths avoided multiplication for large numbers and defaulted to addition instead, resulting in frequent mistakes when converting units or solving perimeter problems.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student repeatedly forgot essential materials like textbooks and graph books, losing valuable learning time at the start of lessons.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Torrens Park noticed that a Year 10 student, after initially needing lots of guidance with factorisation, now tries new problem-solving strategies without prompting and even challenged the tutor's explanations when unsure—something she hadn't done before.

Another recent session saw a senior student, who had previously hesitated to ask for help, openly admit confusion about a worksheet and then quickly grasp the concept during the lesson; she even asked for more questions once she got the hang of it.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student showed real independence by borrowing her own maths textbook from school to bring to tutoring sessions.

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 Mitcham Memorial Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Scotch College - Torrens Park Campus.