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Private science tutors that come to you in person or online

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Woodstock's tutors include a current senior maths and science teacher with experience across primary to Year 11, an ex-high school mathematics teacher with a B.Ed. and M.Sc., a university scholarship recipient with extensive youth tutoring, language teachers and academic markers, Olympiad and AMC distinction achievers, and accomplished peer mentors passionate about guiding students of all ages.

Noman
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Noman

Science Tutor Mernda, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do is that he should be ready to help him/her out whenever he/she needs. That includes even giving them extra hours or multiple sessions so that all of help is provided to him/her. A tutor should always come prepared for tutoring session to maximize the learning experience. A tutor should always be open to…
Mo
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Mo

Science Tutor Mernda, VIC
To give them the ability and confidence to approach and solve problems by teaching them the basic principles and visualization of these principles in play. Being a recent student myself and also a current one, I understand the difficulties that a student may be going through with their studies. Instead of overwhelming them with details at the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Science

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Warrick
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Warrick

Science Tutor Kalkallo, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to first be understanding as each student has different experiences with learning subjects and may also have problems outside of education. Secondly would be to be approachable and appear easy-going so the student will not be intimidated or scared in having learning sessions with you.…
Jayant
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Jayant

Science Tutor Mernda, VIC
As tutor, the greatest impact that one can have is that of helping a student better shape and sharpen, not only their understanding of a subject but also their attitudes and philosophies towards learning. That is, to help positively reframe their perspective in a way that helps them best succeed I would say my greatest strengths as a tutor are…
Antara
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Antara

Science Tutor Mernda, VIC
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is build a student's confidence. When they believe in themselves, they're way more likely to actually learn and succeed. Also, creating a supportive and encouraging environment is key. And of course, helping them develop good study habits that they can use long after our sessions are over is super…
Nienke
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Nienke

Science Tutor Doreen, VIC
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student is support them academically, as well as personally. I believe that it is vital to approach each student holistically, catering for each individual in accordance with their personal needs. Secondly, I believe it is important that students are supported according to their own goals,…
Daniela
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Daniela

Science Tutor Beveridge, VIC
The most important thing is that the student is comfortable with you and that the tutor is actually helping them to learn and improve. Not only should the tutor be able to improve the students scores for a particular subject, they should also be able to teach them ways to study and prepare so that the student not only knows the material for the…
Mustafa
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Mustafa

Science Tutor South Morang, VIC
Ultimately, a successful tutor should bolster their students' confidence and make them realize and maximize their academic potential. Moreover, a successful tutor should have the ability to make learning authentic, relevant and overall a good experience for the student. I believe I am very patient in teaching my students. In essence, listening to…

Local Reviews

Michael Harvey has been a fantastic tutor with an amazing attitude towards teaching.
Tevfik

Inside WoodstockTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Sam worked on calculating area and volume for composite shapes, along with practising fraction operations using visual models.

Year 9 student Mia tackled quadratic factorisation—including difference of perfect squares—and moved on to graphing parabolas by identifying turning points and axes of symmetry.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Alex reviewed key concepts in Newton's laws of motion and completed practice problems involving two-dimensional dynamics as preparation for upcoming assessments.

Recent Challenges

Homework was often left incomplete, especially for algebra and fractions, which limited chances to reinforce new skills—"needs to do more homework to practice and re-enforce learned skills."

In Year 10, messy working in trigonometry meant sign errors were hard to spot; as noted, "writing out each step rather than solving in his head" would have made mistakes easier to find.

For a senior student tackling mechanics, late replies and rushing last-minute homework before deadlines resulted in missed opportunities for deeper understanding and test preparation.

One session ended with the frustration of forgotten basic math principles clouding progress on problem-solving tasks.

Recent Achievements

One Woodstock tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 9 student's approach to factorisation—she started the lesson needing step-by-step support, but by the end, she was breaking down complex questions into smaller parts and working through them independently.

In another session, a high schooler who used to avoid practice tests actually completed one on her own before tutoring began and then engaged much more during revision.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who had previously hesitated with multiplication facts showed new initiative by tackling trickier times tables without prompting and even asked for extra challenge problems.

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 Whittlesea Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Donnybrook Primary School.