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Woodcroft's tutors feature a former high school Dux with a 95.5 ATAR, seasoned K–12 maths and science teachers with education degrees and seven years' experience, university medallists in advanced sciences, peer mentors, debating leaders, Olympiad award-winners, creative writers, and private tutors celebrated for subject-topping results across English, Maths Extension, Biology and Chemistry.

Eesha
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Eesha

Psychology Tutor Glenwood, NSW
I think the most important thing for a tutor is to understand what the student needs and work through those blocks with positive reinforcement. Some students have a hard time understanding concepts while others have no faith in themselves and struggle to retain information. I believe that the best thing a tutor can do for a student is to figure…
Sunghee
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Sunghee

Psychology Tutor Schofields, NSW
Believing in the student is the most vital quality in the tutor-student relationship in my opinion. When there is genuine faith that the student can achieve their goal, it is within my duty as their tutor to help them reach it by doing additional research, being motivated each session, and planning and organising their materials ahead of time so…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

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Meera
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Meera

Psychology Tutor Girraween, NSW
I believe taking ample effort in preplanning lessons, thinking about the topic for different perspectives is vey important. The most important thing, I think is to stick with the student till they understand the topic and not race through the course plan. I think I am very creative in approaching problems. I can easily get into the mindset of the…
Salihah
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Salihah

Psychology Tutor Bungarribee, NSW
I think one of the most important things a tutor can do is create a safe and supportive space where the student feels comfortable asking questions and making mistakes. Learning can be intimidating, especially when someone is struggling, so it’s crucial that a tutor builds trust and encourages curiosity without judgment. When a student feels safe…
Isha
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Isha

Psychology Tutor Schofields, NSW
Be honest. Be flexible. Be patient. Be a good listener. Be willing to share your own experiences. Be a collaborator. Teach the student how to learn. Be confident. The ability to solve conflicts, emotional intelligence. creativity and enthusiasm for teaching. ability to explain difficult things in a simple way. I have the ability to…
Shreeyut
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Shreeyut

Psychology Tutor Schofields, NSW
Patience is an essential quality required from a tutor as it is important to acknowledge that every student has a different level of understanding and approach towards their studies, and thus the best method of maximising their understanding is to tailor our teaching methods to motivate their learning and provide an encouraging learning…
Narin
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Narin

Psychology Tutor Bella Vista, NSW
Few viable things which a tutor can do to help the students are: a) Deliver to them motivational thoughts and constantly encouraging them to do well. b) Critically thinking about any difficulty which might pose a hurdle in the pathway of student's learning and bring-forth ways to mitigate it. As a tutor, I believe to have the following…

Local Reviews

It was so simple to order a tutor. Within a few days our tutor was at our place. Our tutor is excellent, he knows exactly what our son needs after we discussed what we needed help with . Our son gets on really well with our tutor and is enjoying one on one learning.
Mrs Carla Oxley, Doonside

Inside WoodcroftTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Veda focused on strengthening fundamentals by tackling assessment questions across number operations and was introduced to algebraic thinking through basic problems.

For Year 10, the lesson with Arjun targeted trigonometric equations and identities, including simplifying expressions using key formulas.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 session for Sarah centred on ratios and rates as well as statistics, practising interpretation of data sets and proportional reasoning in context.

Recent Challenges

The Year 8 student's maths book showed confusing structuring of working out, which led to errors in equations, as a tutor observed.

In Year 3, forgetting to borrow when subtracting money or not knowing when to subtract caused repeated mistakes during problem-solving.

One senior student rarely revisited past topics, so key methods faded and revision tests were harder than expected—especially for HSC content.

Another high schooler skipped writing steps in algebra, making it tough to spot sign errors until late in the process.

Missing or incomplete homework was noted across several grades; this slowed recall and progress on new material.

Recent Achievements

One Woodcroft tutor recently saw a Year 10 student move from hesitating on trigonometry questions to working through medium-difficulty problems independently and explaining her reasoning out loud.

Another high schooler, previously unsure about how to tackle worded algebra problems, has started identifying where she gets stuck and now asks for clarification instead of guessing—making it much easier to address gaps directly.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who struggled with time-telling last term can now read the clock accurately and draw different times on her own; in her last session, she completed every question without prompting.

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 Lalor Park Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Doonside High School.