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Woodberry's tutors include a former K–12 academic coach with seven years' experience, a university science graduate and current maths/physics tutor, a biomedical student recognised for primary maths mentoring, an HSC ATAR 97.95 scorer and peer leader, plus school Duxes and competition awardees in STEM—each bringing proven teaching skills and subject passion to local students.

Zac
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Zac

Chemistry Tutor Maryland, NSW
The most important thing a chemistry tutor should be doing for a student is creating a safe and supportive environment in which the student feels comfortable asking questions and making mistakes. This will also boost the student's confidence in their own abilities allowing tutors to identify learning gaps easier to see where the student is…
Sneha
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Sneha

Chemistry Tutor Tarro, NSW
Some of the most important things a chemistry tutor can provide for a student in my opinion include; - Have patience - A fun attitude to help make the learning experience enjoyable and to further help understand the difficult concepts they may come across. - Willingness to sacrifice extra time if need be to ensure their student is completely…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Chemistry

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Hannie Lyn
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Hannie Lyn

Chemistry Tutor Metford, NSW
The most important thing a chemistry tutor can do for a student is to help them develop their learning style. Students who are performing poorly in school need help to know the best learning style that is effective for them. As a tutor, exploring learning styles with the student is vital. Once students understand their learning style, they can…
Donovan
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Donovan

Chemistry Tutor Tenambit, NSW
I believe the best thing a chemistry tutor can do is to encourage their students and foster enthusiasm for learning, instead of looking at it as a chore, together we can build their toolbox of skills to take on the world. One of my greatest strengths when tutoring is that my wide range of experiences allows me to make tailored analogies to…
Abhitab
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Abhitab

Chemistry Tutor Fletcher, NSW
Provide proper learning material and plan to study. Patience and implementing the learning…
Kristen
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Kristen

Chemistry Tutor Maryland, NSW
A tutor should not just be present to give the student all the answers. Its about building confidence and understanding the student’s way of thinking in order to help them grasp concepts and overcome their academic difficulties. Its about taking on a leadership and mentor role so that you can guide your student, and making them feel comfortable…
Yogita
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Yogita

Chemistry Tutor Shortland, NSW
Try to teach basic first and then proceed further so that student learn in a better way and give real life examples to solve queries so that students relate easily and dnt take so much burden for tough subjects. Make lengthy subjects easy with implementing new creative ideas or methods so that students can learn…
Richard
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Richard

Chemistry Tutor Shortland, NSW
The biggest thing would be to help students understand that ignorance is not failure. Just because they don't know something "basic", that does not mean they are worse than others, or are stupider, or are not going to succeed. It simply means they were not taught in a way that makes sense to them. This could be for a number of reasons, and not…

Local Reviews

We have been really happy with Adrian - he is great.
Dianna

Inside WoodberryTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Emily worked through converting decimals to fractions and percentages, as well as decimal placement in numbers.

Year 8 student James practised solving straight-line equations using the gradient formula (m) and y-intercept (c), tackling several exam-style problems for deeper understanding.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Olivia revised surds and indices, including negative indices and simplifying fractional powers, while also applying scientific notation to unit conversions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student was hesitant to attempt challenging algebra and indices problems, often freezing up when unsure—student freezes up when overwhelmed, shuts down, second guesses—which led to repeated errors and a reluctance to practice independently.

In Year 8 maths, another struggled with multi-step worded questions, losing focus partway through and missing key data needed for problem-solving.

Meanwhile, in Year 11 English, failing to plan essays resulted in scattered ideas and missed opportunities to build arguments with evidence.

Forgotten homework or revision tasks also meant less confidence recalling prior concepts during lessons.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Woodberry noticed Molly, a Year 10 student, moving from needing step-by-step guidance to independently solving two advanced algebra questions after recalling methods from earlier sessions—a shift from past uncertainty with exam-style tasks.

In Year 8, Rylan recently demonstrated more initiative during revision by looking up statistics for his history assessment on his own and identifying the main revision points without prompting.

Meanwhile, Olivia in Year 5, who used to hesitate with new number concepts, now logically works out Roman numerals she hasn't seen before and applies her multiplication tables quickly when tackling large numbers.

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 Beresfield Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Woodberry Public School.