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Waterfall Gully's tutors include a Master-qualified school teacher with specialist experience in Years 7–12 maths and science, seasoned UMAT and K–12 maths mentors, Glenunga's Dux and debating coach, IB Maths competition finalists, accomplished peer leaders in music and languages, plus high-achieving graduates skilled at inspiring students across English, STEM, and the arts.

Jonathan
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Jonathan

Tutor Beaumont, SA
- Being available for the student not only during lesson times but during the week - Being empathetic that not all students learn at the same rate, every student is different and therefore require different teaching techniques - Being responsible and preparing teaching material in advance My main strengths lie in my communication skills. I…
Rucan
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Rucan

Tutor Burnside, SA
Provide a structured and highly efficient way of teaching that simultaneously encourages independent problem-solving and allows the student to understand the concepts in a comprehensive way. Students should have a deep understanding about the subject which is not just a cut-and-paste from what the teacher explains. Teaching independent critical…
1st Lesson Trial

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Skye
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Skye

Tutor Glen Osmond, SA
The most important goal for a tutor is to spark students' interest in the subject. Tutoring is not only about assisting with a student's grade. I do believe, though, that every student should find out what they are enthusiastic about. Due to my dual language proficiency in English and Chinese as an international student, I have experience…
Matthew
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Matthew

Tutor Hazelwood Park, SA
A tutor should display patience, kindness, and develop a relationship with the student; as well as personalised learning. I think it is important to develop different strategies of explaining concepts to students, this is a skill I was able to further improve whilst on placement. There is more to tennis coaching than teaching children how to…
Laura
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Laura

Tutor St Georges, SA
I believe that it is important for tutors to be passionate about teaching. This way, it is easier for the student to gain interest in the subject, which ultimately leads to better performance from the student as they are more motivated to study and learn. I also think that it is important for tutors to create a comfortable learning environment for…
Jonathan
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Jonathan

Tutor Burnside, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to accommodate their learning style. Students have ranging techniques and motivations when learning content. Personally, I struggled with auditory learning as a student, and would therefore ask my teachers to give me a range of tactile learning techniques to assist in my learning. I…
Kate
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Kate

Tutor Glen Osmond, SA
tutor/mentor should teach student how to think and ways to process the the subject in question. Student will not able to maintain the theory if all they they can remember is the process I think my strength is the ability to communicate with younger kids and also trying different methods to help them understand and learn. I believe that learning…
Char Yee
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Char Yee

Tutor Stonyfell, SA
Listening to the student Breaking down information to ensure understanding occurs Helping student believe in him/her self Patience Persistence Communication Understanding that all students are different and use different methods to…
Farzan
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Farzan

Tutor Hazelwood Park, SA
understanding that not all students understand concepts the same way and the first time that can sense when students do not understand and willingly tries another approach of presenting the material. Passionate, empathetic, good listener, explaining material in multiple ways, reliable, evaluating students with asking several questions, and Giving…
Keshvinder Singh
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Keshvinder Singh

Tutor Myrtle Bank, SA
Help. A tutor should allow for the student to work with their strengths to solve problems, and also to work on weaknesses. a tutor should work with a student, ie. adapt to how different students work, and help them work according to their process. I am good with working with people. as a tutor, i also allow a student to discover answers with a…
Chongkai
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Chongkai

Tutor Glenunga, SA
To ensure that the students do comprehend everything that has been taught I am sensitive to observe the studying behavior thus I could create an unique study method for the…
Tina Chenxi
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Tina Chenxi

Tutor Myrtle Bank, SA
1. The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them become more confident with themselves about their ability to achieve the grade they want in the subject they want. As a wise person once said, "if you believe, you're already half way there." As a tutor I want to be able to help my students believe in themselves so they realise…
XINYUE
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XINYUE

Tutor Urrbrae, SA
As a tutor, the most important thing is to "preach". Tutors who don't know how to "preach" often only focus on academic matters, which can easily lead to intensified conflicts between teachers and students. The premise of "preaching" is to establish a harmonious teacher-student relationship. I think there are three key points, that is, to be more…
Xingyu
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Xingyu

Tutor Glenunga, SA
A tutor needs to always be supportive. A student needs a tutor because (s)he wants help. Sometimes not getting a good result can be frustrating for them. A tutor needs to make sure that the students are motivated to improve. I'm good at understanding why the students are stuck, whether it is not knowing how to apply a formula or weak algebraic…
Mudra
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Mudra

Tutor Glenunga, SA
Vital part tutor can play is to explain problems and help them finding solutions in best possible way by including bit of fun activities as well to motivate them towards the subject. Enhance their confidence with little achievements. Also, to understand what they have understood and where are they facing problems with that again. Communication…
Nadiah Amalina Binte
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Nadiah Amalina Binte

Tutor Glenunga, SA
Understanding and learning about the child's needs and adapting your teaching style to best suit their needs. It is also important to develop a trusting relationship in which the child knows that the tutor is there to provide them with the best support they can offer to aid their learning. I believe that I am a very child-centered tutor. I believe…
Jason
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Jason

Tutor Wattle Park, SA
Listening to the students is the most important things a tutor can do. Not everyone can study at the same pace or method. While I have my method of teaching, it helps the student to be more comfortable to study in a way that they are familiar or works for them. I can be as soft or hard as required to teach my students. Listening to them and…
Tumal
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Tumal

Tutor Wattle Park, SA
As a tutor, my most important goal is to help my student understand the material and develop their problem-solving skills. To achieve this, I create a welcoming and supportive environment where my student feels comfortable asking questions and seeking help when needed. I use a variety of teaching methods to reach all types of learners, such as…
Challista
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Challista

Tutor Erindale, SA
As tutor, we must make the student happy, comfortable, and have good communication with students. For example, when I have an opportunity to teach the students in primary 2. I want to teach them how to solve the math and explain the homework or material from school. After that, students must do the questions that i give or do the homework from…
Jason
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Jason

Tutor Erindale, SA
One of the most important things I have realised over helping my friends in year 12 would be to walk through the question and not actually doing the question for the student. Sure you could do the question for them and they could get full marks for an assignment or whatever, but they would not understand the fundamentals lying behind the question…
Archibald
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Archibald

Tutor Glenside, SA
I believe the most powerful way a tutor can aid a student is by giving them confidence. More than often, students can show more vulnerability in a one-on-one session than in a classroom surrounded by their peers, and so the best thing I can do is use these private sessions to impart confidence in the students by making them see ways they can…
Angelina
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Angelina

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…
Anal Kanti
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Anal Kanti

Tutor Fullarton, SA
The most important thing for a tutor is to understand the weaknesses of a student, identify his/her areas of discomfort and find a suitable way for the student to digest. Being able to be a good friend of the student is also a rare quality every tutor should possess. I have 5+ years of experience tutoring students from various background. My good…

Local Reviews

Excellent, ongoing communication & a great first experience with our son's Year 12 tutor. We look forward to the rest of this journey.
Heather Goode, Mount Osmond

Inside Waterfall GullyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 12 student Divyanshu worked on differentiating rational and irrational functions from first principles in Mathematical Methods, as well as tackling stoichiometry calculations and unit conversions like %w/v and ppm in Chemistry.

In Year 11, Lucy focused on revising index laws and practicing operations with fractions—adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing—while also converting between improper and mixed fractions.

Year 9 student Zac explored algebraic expressions by simplifying terms and substituting variables, then reviewed angles within polygons by calculating unknown interior and exterior values using diagrams for support.

Recent Challenges

A Year 12 Chemistry student, after being shown how to draw esters and carbohydrates, repeatedly skipped structural details—such as correct hydrogen or oxygen placement—which meant the oxygen atoms were often attached to the wrong carbon, as one tutor observed. This habit led to confusion in multi-step synthesis questions.

In Year 11 Maths, incomplete working was common: when tackling differentiation with eËŁ or ln(x), steps were missed, resulting in sign errors and lost marks under time pressure.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student's untidy working made it hard to trace calculation errors when converting mixed fractions, causing repeated confusion during corrections.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Waterfall Gully recently noticed some real shifts across different year levels.

In Year 11 Chemistry, Divyanshu moved from needing frequent prompts to independently balancing tricky neutralisation reactions and even using the chain, product, and quotient rules confidently in calculus—something he'd previously hesitated with.

Meanwhile, Zac in Year 9 English went from struggling to get words on the page to writing a full-length essay within a week, showing both initiative and structure.

On the primary side, Lucy started volunteering strategies for adding fractions herself after usually waiting for guidance, and last session she factorised simple equations without prompting.

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 Burnside Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Seymour College.