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Tutors in West Richmond include a gold-medallist physics graduate and university demonstrator, a former secondary school Dux with All India Talent Search honors, Kumon English and Maths specialist with an ATAR of 99.20, an experienced K–12 science and early years teacher with a Bachelor of Education, and accomplished private tutors for Years 8–12 STEM subjects.

Jessica
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Jessica

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to be prepared for each session, including having a strong grasp of the content, being able to answer and explain each of the questions the student has. Having the ability to transfer the knowledge the tutor has to the student in a way that is easy to understand and is also correct is…
Paramveer Singh
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Paramveer Singh

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
Supporting them through thick and thin and making sure they can understand topics and apply them to problems not limited to books but to other subjects too. A simple example would be application of basic and complext algebra throughout econ, accounting and finance. Also making sure that a student can approach an examination a certain way, that…
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Anant
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Anant

Economics Tutor Parkside, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their students is to foster a supportive and encouraging learning environment. This involves not only teaching the material but also building the student’s confidence in their own abilities. A tutor should inspire curiosity and provide the tools for students to become independent learners, so they feel…
Matthew
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Matthew

Economics Tutor Malvern, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is give a student tools with which to find answers for future questions. I am accessible and personable, and enjoy relating to students and their specific educational situation. I am able to break down concepts into understandable chunks, and I love to use analogies to achieve…
David
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David

Economics Tutor Glenelg South, SA
A tutor should help a student foremost achieve the specific academic goals that they wish to attain; but the way in which they should do this is by inspiring a love of learning in the student. By achieving this dual function, you are more likely to attain success for short term results as well as success for the entirety of their academic careers.…
Christopher
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Christopher

Economics Tutor North Adelaide, SA
Guiding them in their way of learning, and helping students understand concepts through a lens of someone that is experienced in that subject. As a tutor my aim is to get kids to genuinely understand the material they're learning, not just memorisation, true understanding. As the best way I believe kids should approach…
Travis
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Travis

Economics Tutor Nailsworth, SA
Be patient and clear when explaining a topic. Try to understand that some people struggle more than others and that a clear understanding of the topic may require different things for different people. I am very patient and understanding. I will be able to use this to explain details to people in different ways so they will have a better chance of…
Karan
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Karan

Economics Tutor Nailsworth, SA
TO EDUCATE TO EMPOWER WITH GOOD MORAL OUTLOOK TO MAKE AND BELIEVE IN HARDWORK AND POSITIVE OUTCOME. TO BE KIND TO EVERY HUMAN BEING AND TEACH EVERYONE WITH NO AGE RESTRICTIONS. My strengths as a tutor are 1) Perseverance 2) Confidence 3)Positive and handle difficulties effortlessly. 4) Attention to detail. 5)Kind and caring. 6)…
Taison
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Taison

Economics Tutor Walkerville, SA
The most important thing is to answer their questions and teach them well, not just know copy the answers down but actually understand what's going and teach them my own experience As a Chinese background student, I think my math is good and I'm a people person as I have customer service for more than two years and I really want to make more…
Omer
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Omer

Economics Tutor St Georges, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are clarify difficult concepts, build confidence, and encourage independent thinking. A tutor should not just provide answers but help students develop a deeper understanding of the subject by guiding them through problems and encouraging critical thinking. Equally important is creating a…
Thomas
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Thomas

Economics Tutor Evandale, SA
One of the most important roles of a tutor is to provide students with a framework of learning techniques and methods that will remain applicable in future areas of study. A tutor should also foster a love or appreciation of learning through active engagement with their pupils; this is by far the most important thing a tutor can do for a student.…
Sonam
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Sonam

Economics Tutor Trinity Gardens, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make things easy for the students to learn. This means by making the students understand and gain knowledge easily which will help them for the long run. As a tutor,my strengths are mainly my communication skills and am very good at figuring out the weak spot of a student. I am…
Veanna
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Veanna

Economics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
- communication, trust and team work. communication is not only important for the teaching aspect of tutoring but i would like my student to be confident enough in me such that they can voice out their doubts and concerns to me. trust is important in making sure that they are able to confide in me and team work because if they cooperate with me…

Local Reviews

My daughter has been improving on leaps and bounds. We are very pleased that Ezymaths have made such an effort to find a perfect tutor. Well done ezymaths they are a great match. I am raving about the changes, to all in a similar way. I would rate ezymath as 110 percent out of 100
Irene, Torrensville

Inside West RichmondTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Ava worked on equivalent fractions and explored the relationship between multiplication and division through hands-on activities.

For Year 9, Ethan focused on trigonometry concepts and practiced solving linear equations, building confidence with step-by-step examples.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Charlotte reviewed logarithms—applying log rules to solve equations—and tackled related problems without a calculator to strengthen her algebraic reasoning.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student's "messy/disorganized" books and sheets in Maths made it harder to keep track of assignment instructions, leading to confusion during multi-step problems—"fixing this may help her keep track of tasks," a tutor observed.

Meanwhile, a Year 10 student appeared unmotivated and tired, which impacted his willingness to engage with new content from the start.

In Year 8, attempts at worded maths problems often stalled because the student struggled to identify what questions were actually asking for—sometimes skipping over terms or misreading instructions. In these moments, frustration crept in before any calculations even began.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in West Richmond noticed Tia now regularly catches her own mistakes when drawing gradients or solving equations—last session she paused before making an error and corrected it herself, which is a big shift from relying on hints.

Another secondary student, Zoe, went from struggling with statistics to independently tackling similar problems after just one walkthrough; she's also much more organised for exams than earlier in the term.

In primary years, Natalia has started spotting missed parts of questions and goes back to fix them without prompting—in today's session she even finished all her analogue clock problems unassisted.

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 Hilton Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Tenison Woods Catholic Primary School.