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Upper Coomera's tutors include school Duxes with ATARs up to 99.75, an experienced K–12 teacher aide, a university medal-winning physicist and science mentor, a former assistant professor in IT engineering, seasoned primary specialists with education degrees, peer mentors and Olympiad participants, plus passionate maths and English tutors with hands-on classroom and coaching experience.

zane
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zane

PDHPE Tutor Upper Coomera, QLD
Be open, non-judgemental when students struggle and act as a good role model for how they should behave. Very Patient and understanding, when students struggle with ideas. Ability to try different approaches to teaching to see what works best to.the…
Sara
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  • Naplan
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Sara

PDHPE Tutor Upper Coomera, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to equip them with the confidence they require to suceed academically. Ultimately the role of the tutor is to facilatate the child's learning. Instilling a sense of belief in the child's self will ultimately allow them to suceed in their goals. I am extremely patient. In addition my work…
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Local Reviews

I would recommend Ezymaths to anyone who needs a tutor for their child or children. They listen to what you need in a tutor and it doesn't take them too long to get u one. The tutor contacts u very quickly. I have 2 tutors for my daughter and they have all been extreme wonderful.
Aphroditi, Upper Coomera

Inside Upper CoomeraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Milly worked on converting improper fractions to mixed numbers and practiced multiplying decimals, especially with smaller values like 0.3 x 0.05.

For Year 9, Jay tackled graphing linear equations and interpreting gradients by plotting lines and finding x- and y-intercepts from different equation forms.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Aiden focused on solving quadratic equations both algebraically and by graphing their solutions, using visual sketches to reinforce understanding.

Recent Challenges

In Year 4, one student's written calculations for mixed fractions and decimals were hard to follow—layout issues meant "comma placements in listing terms" were muddled.

In Year 7, a tutor observed, "he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors," especially during rearranging equations and finding coordinates on graphs.

For a Year 11 student working on trigonometry with radians, revision focused mainly on familiar questions instead of attempting the harder application problems suggested.

A Year 9 student preparing assessment drafts avoided writing detailed responses; more focus went into cosmetic corrections than improving content depth or clarity.

Recent Achievements

One Upper Coomera tutor noticed a Year 9 student who previously hesitated to speak up now openly talks through her thinking while adding and simplifying fractions, using pen-to-paper checks instead of guessing.

In a recent high school session, a Year 10 boy who struggled with rearranging equations started working independently, successfully solving for x without prompts—something he avoided before.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who was confused by decimals now places them correctly in every exercise and explains her reasoning out loud; last lesson, she finished all ten decimal questions on her own with no mistakes.

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 Nerang Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Saint Stephen's College.