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Private chemistry tutors that come to you in person or online

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Wombarra's tutors include an experienced school teacher with a B.Ed and eight years of K–10 classroom expertise, a 2022 Dux with a 97.8 ATAR and UNSW scholarship, university-trained private tutors, peer mentors from selective schools, Duke of Edinburgh leaders, and accomplished youth coaches in sports, creative writing, and STEM fields.

Luke
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Luke

Chemistry Tutor Bulli, NSW
It is essential to foster independence and confidence in a student’s learning journey. This involves helping them grasp concepts and equipping them with effective study strategies + problem-solving skills to apply across subjects. Equally important is creating a space where students feel supported & motivated, encouraging them to stay engaged…
Grace
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Grace

Chemistry Tutor Bulli, NSW
I think the most important things a chemistry tutor can do for a student is creating an environment and relationship which they feel both comfortable and willing to learn in. This can begin anywhere from allowing the student to ask any question and getting a respectful answer to being an easily accessible resource for the student so they feel…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Chemistry

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Natasha
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Natasha

Chemistry Tutor Woonona, NSW
I think a chemistry tutor should provide a fun, engaging and different approach to studying. A tutor should ask questions in a way a teacher hasn't got the time to do. They should always ask what the student wants and implement strategies as to how to attain these goals. But, perhaps at the forefront of responsibility, a tutor should always make…
Lakshmi
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Lakshmi

Chemistry Tutor Bulli, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be an inspiration to them in achieving their milestones, tracking their progress, recording their scores and provide constructive feedbacks and reinforcement. To be dedicated in seeing a student's improvement by helping reach their full potential. My greatest strength being a tutor is…
Anders
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Anders

Chemistry Tutor Bulli, NSW
The most important thing for a tutor to be able to do is to help the student develop their own abilities, and give them study habits and practices in class that will help the student to deepen their understanding of the underlying principles being taught. A tutor must also be able to communicate with the student and explain problems in a way that…

Local Reviews

Ruby's session with Hany went well, she said she got a lot out of it and is keen to keep going.
Catherine

Inside WombarraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Remi worked on solving linear equations and tackling rates and ratios, including practice with Pythagoras' theorem using sample exam questions.

For Year 10, Emily focused on sketching graphs by hand and deepening her understanding of logarithms through targeted problems.

Meanwhile, Year 4 student Leo reviewed perimeter calculations for various shapes and practised quick-fire multiplication and subtraction drills to build confidence with basic operations.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student working on sine rule and graphing tended to assume pronumerals would always appear in the same order as previous questions, which led to errors in both working out and answers.

In Year 9, "closer attention to detail" was needed when handling indices and more challenging algebraic problems—skipping over key details meant negative signs or fractional exponents were sometimes mishandled.

A Year 8 student avoided writing out full workings in maths, saying, "the answer should be enough by itself," but this habit hid calculation mistakes.

During a stressful week, a Year 7 learner became reluctant to complete homework and lost confidence after setbacks; at one point, he dodged discussing missed tasks entirely.

Recent Achievements

A Wombarra tutor noticed that a Year 9 student who used to freeze up when facing unfamiliar algebra questions is now working through parabolas with ease, even describing them confidently without prompting.

In Year 11 maths, another student had previously struggled to factorise quadratics, but after learning the cross method, she managed to apply it successfully across examples—something she'd found confusing before.

Meanwhile, a younger student who once avoided word problems has begun tackling them head-on; last session he finished a full set independently of time and date questions without needing reminders or extra help.

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 Thirroul Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Coledale Public School.