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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.

Urna
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Urna

Tutor Chatswood, NSW
Help each children succeed their own goals (we would need to ask them what their goal is at first) Ability to establish a rapport with…
Adelaide
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Adelaide

Tutor Riverview, NSW
Ensuring that the method of teaching is suited to the student and engages them in order to consolidate their learning. I am a very patient person and willing to spend time with a student to ensure a strong understanding of different…
1st Lesson Trial

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Jason
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Jason

Tutor Forestville, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to establish their confidence, give them the attention, teach the most efficient strategies to succeed in the exam with the least lessons. Students can't succeed in their exam is because there are so-called 'good students' in their class, for multiple reasons, their teachers don't actually…
Daniel
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Daniel

Tutor Forestville, NSW
I think a tutor should be capable of answering any questions discussing any uncertainties that a student may have. These should be explained clearly and if the student does not understand initially, the tutor should continue to explain in alternate ways (e.g. rewording sentences and visual aids such as diagrams) until the student understands. In…
Jay
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Jay

Tutor Cherrybrook, NSW
Aside from being knowledgeable, I believe that a tutor should have good communication skills and should be a person that a student can look up to and confide in. Establishing meaningful relationships with students maximises their own academic output and the added social interaction increases the wellbeing and happiness of students. If I was given…
Alinah
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Alinah

Tutor West Pennant Hills, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is enrich their learning experience so they can understand the importance of education, and the essential nature of honing their critical thinking skills. Tutoring should be taught to not be simply for academic success, but success as a communicator and thinker. I think I am…
James
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James

Tutor Greenwich, NSW
I think a tutor should strive their best to bring knowledge to the students, and at the meantime, adjusting to the best teaching method towards different students. Moreover, I prefer my students to enjoy the class since pleasure could boost the effectiveness for learning. I am a very patient person, whom I am willing to spend time to explain the…
Nicole
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Nicole

Tutor Greenwich, NSW
A good tutor should help their student develop a love for what they are learning. When this is done successfully, this has a knock-on effect on the student's results as they are more engaged with the content they are learning. This starts with the tutor being passionate about the content they are teaching and being determined to push the student…
Rebecca
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Rebecca

Tutor Greenwich, NSW
I think it's really important for a tutor to offer intrinsic motivation to a student. I find that alot of students are easily academically discouraged. I believe my role as a tutor is to provide them guidance and encouragement. However, I believe a tutor should always be realistic and honest with their student as it would be wrong to offer false…
Alejandra
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Alejandra

Tutor Crows Nest, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to show students how amazing and talented they are and how capable they are of making great thing with amazing guidance. I create really dinámica classes and I have a great relationship with my students and their parents. I believe there can not be a positive learning environment if you don't…

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.