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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.

Bisma
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Bisma

Psychology Tutor Hope Valley, SA
A tutor is supposed to ensure learning and the growth of the students academic skills. Also to make sure their goals are strong enough for them to reach success in the future. I am patient and I do not back down if the student is not ready to learn. I use different tactics to engage the student such as asking them what they struggle with and…
Lily
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Lily

Psychology Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most important thing would be to teach a student that studying shouldn't be a chore, and that giving it their all matters more than receiving a perfect grade. I understand that each student is different, and that not every approach will work for an individual, so it is essential that their tutor knows how to adapt to their needs while still…
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Emily
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Emily

Psychology Tutor Collinswood, SA
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is guide that student to success, this can be achieved by listening and being attentive to the childs learning styles and needs. Patience and understanding. I believe that patience is one of the most important qualities to have as a tutor, this is because it can be very frustrating as a…
Mostafa Didar
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Mostafa Didar

Psychology Tutor Norwood, SA
Besides helping them understand and learn a topic, the tutor should also help the student master the topic through mastery learning. Mastery learning is a way of designing units of work so that each set of tasks focuses on a particular learning objective and students must master a task to move onto the next one. The tutor should also help the…
Aleem
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Aleem

Psychology Tutor Kent Town, SA
Bridging the gap between teaching and learning via checking for understanding, scaffolding and adhering to teaching standards and quality teaching frameworks. Developing trusted relationships aids in knowing the students and how to teach them. Motivate learners by playing to their strengths while continuously working on their weaknesses via…
Michelle
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Michelle

Psychology Tutor Adelaide, SA
Setting goals and personalizing each lesson for the student. Knowing what the students what to achieve from each session and making plans to ensure they get the most out of it each time. I excel in English literature but am flexible with any subjects within social sciences. In teaching itself I'm patient and like to work with the students until…
Pratha Mahendra
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Pratha Mahendra

Psychology Tutor Adelaide, SA
I feel a tutor must be able to invoke a sense of interest and joy in a students minds for the subject they teach. As a tutor, you are someone who has studied the subject beforehand and are more knowledgeable about the subject than a student who is just starting out. This makes it difficult for tutors to reach their maximum potential while teaching…
Maryam
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Maryam

Psychology Tutor Gilles Plains, SA
I believe that it is crucial to be adaptive as a tutor as every student is different and may require different tools to help them learn, I also believe this is where being creative will assist me as I can come up with creative solutions to help students in understanding. Patient, creative and understanding as well as being…
Michelle
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Michelle

Psychology Tutor Enfield, SA
Just being able to provide a good quality of help and support for a student, in an encouraging and motivating manner, is what I would consider to be the most important thing a tutor could do for their student. Furthermore, creating that resilience and space of being able to ask for help without feeling shame or guilt along the way. I believe that…
Therese
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Therese

Psychology Tutor Dernancourt, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to ultimately inspire them in a love of learning and hopefully pass onto them capsules of knowledge which are priceless. My strengths as a tutor are to challenge the pupils to think abstractly about language and harness the true power it possesses. I love hearing the pupil's own…
Sanjana
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Sanjana

Psychology Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most crucial things an instructor can do, in my opinion, are to boost confidence, provide individualised advice, and establish a secure environment for enquiries and candid self-evaluation. I can offer helpful criticism and useful techniques, like as dividing work into manageable portions, by allowing students to freely express their actual…
Arsheen
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Arsheen

Psychology Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to not just help with homework and assignments, but build a solid understanding of key concepts and other basics (especially in maths and science) so that the student is equipped with the knowledge and confidence to tackle a wide range of problems on their own. I think one of my…
Ryan
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Ryan

Psychology Tutor Salisbury North, SA
The most important thing is for a tutor to help a student understand the concepts, rather than giving them answers, to help them towards understanding the work independently. I consider myself to be patient with my students as they learn at their own speeds, while providing them with the path to find the answer…

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.