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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Walkley Heights include a Master's-qualified English teacher with years of international classroom and youth mentoring experience, high-ATAR graduates with subject merits, accomplished school Duxes and competition award-winners, experienced peer tutors and camp leaders, primary education specialists, and seasoned K–12 maths and science tutors dedicated to nurturing student confidence and achievement.

Karl
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Karl

PDHPE Tutor Hope Valley, SA
To boost the student's self-esteem and confidence in tackling problem-solving situations to achieve personal development and academic progress. Also, to help them pursue their field of interest and career ambitions. Forming professional yet friendly connections with students, parents, and peers allows me to better understand their challenges,…
Karl
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Karl

PDHPE Tutor Vale Park, SA
I have significant experience working in education and am passionate about teaching and helping young people develop both academic and personal growth. I am adaptable and flexible and am 100% committed to my students to support them through their learning journey. I always demonstrate respect and patience and will do all I can within my power to…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Pari
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Pari

PDHPE Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I believe it is most important for a tutor to tailor their teaching according to the needs of their student. Many students learn in different ways such as visual or through different compounding activities to build a strong foundation before moving on to more difficult concepts. I believe being able to teach a student in the way that is most…
Lauren
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Lauren

PDHPE Tutor Kent Town, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to put in time. They need to act as if it's not just a job which pays. Prepping lessons early, helping with questions outside of tutoring time, marking tests. All of these examples show a great tutor. - I put a lot of care into my work. - I love seeing others thrive through my help. - I…
Samuel
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Samuel

PDHPE Tutor Para Vista, SA
I believe the most important thing which a tutor can do for a student is not only teach them what they need to know but teach them the skills which they need to succeed on their own. I believe this because although a tutor can help with their learning, they can't be there every single step of the way, especially after high school. These skills…
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Ella

PDHPE Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I think it is important to create understanding of topics/problems, not simply just giving answers to students. My strengths as a tutor are empathy, meaning I can relate to and try to understand the students situations as best as possible. My explanation skills are also strong so I can explore different ways of explaining problems for different…
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

Emily commented to me that she thinks Lisa is very nice and is comfortable working with her, which is great. Emily also said that Lisa explains things in a different way that she can understand.
Kerrie, Walkley Heights

Inside Walkley HeightsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Lilah worked on understanding fractions by using a workbook for basic problems and practiced reading analogue clocks to strengthen her grasp of time concepts.

In Year 7, Emily focused on simplifying algebraic expressions through worded questions and deepened her knowledge of exponents while revisiting order of operations (BEDMAS).

Meanwhile, Year 8 student brushed up on the basics of statistics, including mean, median, and mode, then applied these concepts to solve real-world word problems.

Recent Challenges

In Year 7 mathematics, one student often needed prompts to begin multi-step questions independently—"we need to work on Emily doing the questions by herself," a tutor observed after fraction exercises.

She sometimes skipped rereading worded problems, missing key information and struggling with conversions (e.g., meters to centimeters).

In upper primary, another student hesitated before answering even familiar material, repeatedly seeking reassurance before starting calculations or reading tasks; confidence dips meant she'd wait for confirmation instead of trusting her first instincts.

During revision, both occasionally focused only on easier examples, which slowed progress when tackling new or complex homework problems alone.

Recent Achievements

One Walkley Heights tutoring session saw a high school student, Emily, divide mixed numbers independently—a big step up from last week when she kept forgetting the steps.

In another case, after struggling with Roman numerals at first, Lilah (Year 5) remembered last week's lesson and confidently answered every question right this time.

Meanwhile, Duaa (early primary) used to just read words without following the story, but now she's retelling what happened in her books and predicting what might come next. Last lesson, she finished her book and explained each part in her own words.

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 Ingle Farm East Primary School.