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Tutors in Upper Sturt include a university lecturer with a PhD in Education and decades teaching mathematics, an ATAR 98.85 humanities scholar and peer mentor, a seasoned K–12 English and Italian teacher with two master's degrees, music educators with state prizes, plus award-winning youth coaches, debaters, and subject duxes—many experienced mentoring and inspiring students of all ages.

Angelina
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Angelina

Economics Tutor Glenside, SA
I believe it is important to understand the student's weaknesses and strengths before starting to teach them. I have come across a common problem with students, which is that they often jump straight into trying to solve a problem without fully understanding the theory/basics first. Hence, I try to first help them understand the basics then go…
Anusha
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Anusha

Economics Tutor Unley Park, SA
Make sure that the kid is able to communicate any challenges that they are facing and create a healthy and fostering environment that relies more on understanding and solving the problems rather than just covering the syllabus. The ability to make teaching and understanding stuff fun by collaborating key learning skills to activities so that kids…
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Omer
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Omer

Economics Tutor Glen Osmond, SA
The most important things an economics tutor can do for a student are clarify difficult concepts, build confidence, and encourage independent thinking. A tutor should not just provide answers but help students develop a deeper understanding of the subject by guiding them through problems and encouraging critical thinking. Equally important is…
Matthew
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Matthew

Economics Tutor Highgate, SA
The most important thing an economics tutor can do is give a student tools with which to find answers for future questions. I am accessible and personable, and enjoy relating to students and their specific educational situation. I am able to break down concepts into understandable chunks, and I love to use analogies to achieve…
Taison
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Taison

Economics Tutor Glenside, SA
The most important thing is to answer their questions and teach them well, not just know copy the answers down but actually understand what's going and teach them my own experience As a Chinese background student, I think my math is good and I'm a people person as I have customer service for more than two years and I really want to make more…
Veanna
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Veanna

Economics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
- communication, trust and team work. communication is not only important for the teaching aspect of tutoring but i would like my student to be confident enough in me such that they can voice out their doubts and concerns to me. trust is important in making sure that they are able to confide in me and team work because if they cooperate with me…

Local Reviews

Griffith has been fantastic.
Samantha

Inside Upper SturtTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Ava focused on building multiplication and division skills, as well as applying these to everyday money scenarios.

In Year 10, Lucas worked through trigonometric equations and tackled circular geometry problems using visual aids.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Sam addressed applications of integration and explored magnetic induction by linking mathematical techniques to physics contexts.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student was observed not completing much revision between sessions, which meant he "hadn't done much revision between our last two sessions," leaving him less prepared for upcoming tests.

In Year 12 Physics, another student understood the theory during lessons but struggled to recall methods independently when tackling homework. One tutor noted, "he can work out problems with encouragement but struggles to remember how he solved similar equations the previous Sunday."

Meanwhile, a Year 6 student frequently mixed up cents and dollars in money questions—messy working made it harder to spot these misunderstandings in time.

Recent Achievements

One Upper Sturt tutor noticed a Year 10 student who, after initially relying on rote memorisation for kinematics, began applying concepts independently and handed in fully self-checked notes for revision.

In a Year 8 session, a student who used to quietly guess at division problems now eagerly explains each step aloud, showing new ownership of her thinking.

Meanwhile, a younger learner made the leap from struggling with basic time questions to confidently choosing when to add or subtract minutes without prompting—ending the lesson by finishing all ten time word problems correctly on her own.

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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Upper Sturt Primary School.