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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Windsor's tutors include a school dux and Vice-Chancellor's Scholar with peer mentoring expertise, a STEM ambassador who runs coding workshops for high schoolers, a multi-year K–12 maths tutor, an accomplished creative writer and academic competition winner, university-trained engineers and scientists, and specialist educators with experience supporting diverse learners—including in special needs classrooms.

Lucas
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  • Naplan
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Lucas

PDHPE Tutor Annerley, QLD
A tutor can make increase the learning experience for students. By investing the time and effort into the student, the tutor can make the learning experience one of individuality. By incorporating the students interests and relating the content, that can other wise be complex back to existing individual interests. The tutor can build on both…

Local Reviews

John has been an amazing tutor for my son. John restored my son's confidence in his ability to do maths and prepared him for Year 12 exams.I cannot recommend his work highly enough, as he did everything we asked of him and more.
carol schwarzman, Windsor

Inside WindsorTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Jess focused on adding and subtracting fractions as well as simplifying them, and also worked through division and multiplication using practical examples.

In Year 10, Sophie practised rearranging equations and tackled compound interest problems from a practice test to reinforce her understanding before an exam.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Alex reviewed anti-differentiation and differentiation for an assignment, along with cosine and sine functions by working through chapter questions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student struggled to organise her method when analysing geometry problems—she stumbled on some small areas of solving, and incomplete written steps meant confusion slowed her progress.

In Year 11, another student found unfamiliar test questions overwhelming, relying heavily on the tutor to direct each step rather than building independent problem-solving confidence; after setbacks, hesitation increased.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student's messy work layout made it difficult for her to check answers or spot calculation errors in division tasks. These moments left students spending extra time retracing steps instead of tackling new material.

Recent Achievements

One Windsor tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to get stuck rearranging formulas now confidently identifies and corrects her own mistakes during practice tests, showing new independence.

In Year 10 physics, another student who'd previously struggled with Newton's laws was able to explain the difference between linear equations and their application in projectile motion without prompting.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner who once hesitated to start worksheets on her own has begun initiating tasks and works through each question thoroughly before asking for help—last session she completed every problem in the set independently.

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 Grange Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Mary of the Cross School.