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Tutors in West Pymble include a PhD-qualified university lecturer and gold medalist, an HSC All Round Achiever with ATAR 98.7, seasoned maths and science tutors from UNSW and USYD, an award-winning coding and STEM specialist, experienced school coaches and peer mentors, plus high-distinction Maths Olympiad achievers and passionate educators across K–12.

Hilario
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Hilario

Info Processing Tutor Ryde, NSW
Understanding how young adults learn will be helpful in teaching and learning. Being able to identify individual strengths and weaknesses, develop strengths and remediate underdeveloped strength Formal education in teaching has given me the opportunity to gain significant understanding of 21st century…
Alexander
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Alexander

Info Processing Tutor Lane Cove West, NSW
I believe that inspiring passion and confidence are important things a tutor can do for a student, as they are the essential tools required to succeed in school. I am a strong, passionate mathematician that knows what it takes to improve in mathematics. I have great communication skills, and am able to explain difficult-to-grasp topics in…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Info Processing

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Spriha
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Spriha

Info Processing Tutor Epping, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to encourage and instill the confidence to learn, particularly by promoting curiosity and asking questions. This vital skill extends beyond the classroom, empowering students to approach challenges with a problem-solving mindset and seek help when required. Furthermore, by cultivating a love…
Yajur
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Yajur

Info Processing Tutor Waitara, NSW
Tutor can make a student feel at ease,make him comfortable and develope a friendship with him which is a good start before anything. Tutor can make a very strong impact on the student and not only teach him about the particular subject but also things related to daily life. Tutor can also teach students the importance of work ethic, set them up…
Timothy-
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Timothy-

Info Processing Tutor Chatswood, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student, is to understand their obstacles, may it be a particular math topic or studying maths itself. A tutor must be able to guide their student through these obstacles in order for them to succeed in maths. By talking and discussing with the student, a tutor should be able to understand what method…
Matthew
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Matthew

Info Processing Tutor Lane Cove, NSW
Motivation and confidence are two key elements of student success, if I can support them in achieving a sense of self-efficacy regarding these elements, they are bound to see improvement. Students often know where they fall short in their work, they just need motivation to improve those areas. Once they know that they can achieve this themselves,…
Katherine
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Katherine

Info Processing Tutor Telopea, NSW
I think the most important things for a tutor to do is to make sure the student understands how to do the question, and not just give them the answer or formula. It is essential for them to utilise all the skills and I want to foster the ability to identify which methods are required for each question. I like to teach in fun ways so hopefully that…
Martin
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Martin

Info Processing Tutor North Rocks, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to provide them with an proper understanding of the problem so that they can apply it to further problems and extensions instead of teaching the process to answer a specific question. This includes equipping students with problem-solving skills. This method provides more satisfaction for…

Local Reviews

So far the tutor has connected well with my son to work out what he needs and I am pleased that as they work through the topics, the tutor regularly checks in to ensure my son understands the details of what they are working on.
Jo, West Pymble

Inside West PymbleTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 11 student Tom focused on integrating functions using the reverse chain rule and tackled optimisation problems, as well as revising graphing techniques for various functions.

In Year 12, Emily worked through questions on conditional probability and applied geometric series concepts to financial maths scenarios.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Sarah practiced simplifying expressions with trigonometric identities and reviewed exponentials and logarithms, ensuring she could confidently apply log laws in different algebraic contexts.

Recent Challenges

In Year 5, one student repeatedly arrived at lessons without last week's worksheets and had difficulty keeping her materials organised—this made it hard to locate practice tasks when revising.

"She did not complete the homework from last week," a tutor noted, which meant less time spent on challenging worded questions involving number patterns.

Meanwhile, in Year 11 Mathematics, another student relied heavily on their calculator during statistics work and sometimes forgot what formulas represented, slowing down problem-solving when explicit knowledge was required.

In both cases, gaps in organization or over-reliance on aids led to hesitation or lost momentum during more demanding exercises.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in West Pymble recently noticed some meaningful progress with students of different ages. In Year 11, Cayley started asking for clarification on unusually tricky calculus problems rather than getting stuck, which let her finish all but one question with little difficulty—a real change from earlier sessions where she'd hesitate to speak up.

Meanwhile, Viaan (Year 6) has begun spotting and correcting his own errors in long division without prompting; just a few weeks ago he would wait for hints before moving on.

In Year 4, Lauren now independently converts decimals to percentages after previously needing step-by-step reminders—she completed a full worksheet solo this week.

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 Ku-ring-gai Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Our Lady of Perpetual Succour Catholic Primary School.