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Valley View's tutors include a former school maths coordinator and Math Olympiad coach, multiple private tutors with years of experience across K–12 and international curricula, an award-winning early childhood mentor, peer science and English coaches, a university scholar and dux, IGNITE program specialists, and high-achieving graduates in engineering, medicine, and education.

Gloria
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Gloria

PDHPE Tutor Kent Town, SA
Ultimately, the one thing a tutor can do to help their students succeed is to listen to their needs and work with their strengths. Everyone requires an individualised approach and I am willing to work with students to find the method that works for them! I am open to different approaches and coming up with individualised plans of learning. My…
Prithviraj
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Prithviraj

PDHPE Tutor Kent Town, SA
For me, the most important thing a tutor can do is help students stop fearing what they don’t know. Once that fear is gone, they can focus on real learning instead of just chasing marks. A tutor’s role is to guide them to see mistakes as part of the process, build their confidence, and make knowledge something they’re curious about rather…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Terry
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Terry

PDHPE Tutor Kent Town, SA
A tutor's main job is to help re-explaining new concepts and/or help students consolidate new concepts as well as integrating new ones as they are being taught. Therefore, the most important things that a tutor can do for a student is to explain new concepts in simple and relatable terms, encourage interests in a particular subject and most…

Local Reviews

Very happy with the maths Tudor that has been matched with my 13 year old daughter. We have only had 2 sessions so far and already I can see positive results. Looking forward to continuing our Tudor session on a regular basis.
Trudy, Valley View

Inside Valley ViewTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Lilah worked on reading and writing time on analogue clocks, as well as building confidence with multiplication tables through games and practice.

Year 7 student Emily tackled simplifying algebraic expressions from word problems and spent time strengthening her understanding of ratios in different forms.

For Year 8, Adam focused on key statistics concepts such as mean, median, and mode, applying these to solve a range of real-life worded problems using clear step-by-step methods.

Recent Challenges

In Year 7 Maths, Emily often skipped carefully reading worded problems and overlooked crucial details—her tutor noted, "she tends to read quickly over the questions without reading it properly." This led to confusion with BEDMAS tasks and mistakes in order of operations during homework.

In Year 3, Lilah hesitated to start independent work and repeatedly needed reassurance before answering basic time-telling questions, slowing her progress. A lack of confidence meant she sometimes asked for direction even when she knew the answer.

Both scenarios show how rushing or hesitation in process—not content—led to repeated errors or delays mastering new skills.

Recent Achievements

One Valley View tutor noticed a high school student who had previously hesitated with dividing mixed numbers now handling the process more confidently, even recalling steps without prompting, which marks an improvement from last week.

Another older student made real progress in understanding long division logic—something she'd found confusing before—by working through problems and explaining her thinking aloud.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student who used to guess at words is now asking for help when stuck and can retell story events after reading, not just sound out the words. Last session, she finished an entire book and explained what happened on each page.

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 Ingle Farm Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Prescott Primary School, Northern.