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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Woodville include a former military school teacher, a university-level maths tutor with Golden Society honours, an ATAR 97.40 St Peter's College prefect, experienced peer and youth mentors, a primary-qualified educator, and STEM high-achievers spanning Mechanical Engineering, Data Science, Business Analytics, and Laboratory Medicine—each bringing unique subject passion and real teaching experience.

Cristobal
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Cristobal

Tutor Medindie Gardens, SA
Help them achieve their goals and realize their potential. Give them the tools and the confidence to aim higher than they might have done before their tutoring sessions. I am able to identify the gaps in knowledge and address them quickly to ensure steady progress and maintain motivation. I get along well with students and can provide an enjoyable…
Andrew
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Andrew

Tutor Fulham, SA
Help them to believe more in themselves Develop their strong points, improve their week points and get them to understand their limitations Make the feel important and value their input and feedback Encourage them to become better versions of themselves Patient encouraging never give up good communicator (verbal and…
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Rajshree
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Rajshree

Tutor Medindie, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student extend beyond academic instruction. While helping students grasp challenging concepts is crucial, equally vital is fostering a supportive and encouraging learning environment. A tutor should adapt teaching methods to suit the student's unique learning style, provide constructive feedback, and…
Josh
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Josh

Tutor Henley Beach South, SA
I believe the two most important things tutors can do for their students is: to give detailed feedback on a student’s work, recognising their weaknesses and discussing the specific questions in detail, whilst congratulating the student on their correct answers; and to ensure that the student never feels ‘dumb’, leading to them feeling…
Sukhdeep
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Sukhdeep

Tutor Hilton, SA
be realistic and teach them on the real life examples. moreover,we should focus on the abilities of the child and give them opportunities to develop critical thinking. confidence, skill, motivation, cooperation, love, empathy with the children having learning difficulty, mental health support to the children in crisis and learning…
Vatsal
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Vatsal

Tutor Enfield, SA
From personal experience, I have had a few unfair and unsatisfactory experiences with tutors throughout my schooling journey. As a result, I have learnt from those experiences and structured my services in regards to having the student as the main focus. As a tutor, the most important thing I can do is explain and walk a student through unfamiliar…
Harshitha
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Harshitha

Tutor Hilton, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to instill confidence, inspire a love for learning, and provide personalized guidance. Building a supportive and positive learning environment boosts the student's self-esteem and encourages them to embrace challenges. By fostering a passion for learning, tutors can cultivate intrinsic…
Thomas
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Thomas

Tutor Sefton Park, SA
Tutors are expected to bolster student grades however this is not their true purpose, A tutor should help to develop students to not only achieve greater marks but also to have a greater understanding of the field they are being tutored in. This should extend beyond the tutoring time as the student develops the skills required to support…
Mehakpreet
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Mehakpreet

Tutor Sefton Park, SA
Patience Acceptance that it may take separate time for different students in class Being interactive with students so they can be more engaged I can relate academic to real life making it more interesting for…
Nagadevi Nimeesha
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Nagadevi Nimeesha

Tutor Enfield, SA
A tutor should be able to communicate clearly with a student. It is important for a tutor to be patient with a student as different students learn at different paces. A tutor should be able understand the learning style of a student and have the ability to explain a concept in multiple ways to ensure that the student is confident with a concept.…
Pari
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Pari

Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I believe it is most important for a tutor to tailor their teaching according to the needs of their student. Many students learn in different ways such as visual or through different compounding activities to build a strong foundation before moving on to more difficult concepts. I believe being able to teach a student in the way that is most…
Amelie
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Amelie

Tutor North Adelaide, SA
A tutor should be patient and never say something is easy. They should always encourage and find ways to explain something step-by-step such that everything is explained and can be linked back to a central idea. I am patient, friendly, and I can see and understand why something can be difficult to understand. I encourage and can relate to finding…
Rebecca
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Rebecca

Tutor North Adelaide, SA
I consider the tutors passion and enthusiasm towards a subject can have a positive impact on how the student receives the information. When a tutor is enthusiastic on the content they are teaching, this transfers to the student. I am patient and try to break down complex content ideas into manageable ideas. From experience, I have learnt this is…
Emmanuel
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Emmanuel

Tutor Enfield, SA
1. A good tutor must be able to understand his student 2. A good tutor must have adequate knowledge and command over the subject to enable him explain and teach to the understanding of the student. 3. A good tutor be able to communicate clearly with his student. 4. A good tutor must put in much effort to prepare his notes to benefit his…
Emma
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Emma

Tutor Largs Bay, SA
I think the most import things a tutor can do is develop in the student a sense of self belief and confidence along with strong foundational numeracy skills. Along with this a sense of enjoyment and accomplishment will keep them seeking to learn more long after the tutoring has ended. I have years of experience of all years of maths so I know the…
Vikhyat
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Vikhyat

Tutor Clearview, SA
I believe patient and resilient are the key skills for tutoring for the student to excel in their subjects of study. I also think inspiring students to find enjoyment in their subjects to be one of the most important, if not, aspect in tutoring My biggest strength is being able to effectively analyze and solve questions. My ability to memorise…
Shagun
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Shagun

Tutor Enfield, SA
Primarily, a tutor needs to be a good listener. Listen the problems of an individual carefully and provide the solution. Tutor can be a mentor not only of the academic but can be a mentor of other emotional and mental problems. Patience is the baby step to become an effective tutor. Some children might need patience levels that may put me through…
Xijing
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Xijing

Tutor Broadview, SA
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to provide them with "methods" of learning instead of explain the concepts as they are. Because with methods, students can apply the methods elsewhere. Another thing is to teach students how to "become" a tutor as well. Because this is the way I learn difficult subjects. I imagine…
Phuc
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Phuc

Tutor North Adelaide, SA
The most important thing I can do to my students is helping them understand the basis behind every problem they encounter throughout their study and gain confidence in future. I work through the problems with my students methodically. My teaching also adapts with my students. Also I pick up things fast so if anything I don't know I can learn…
Nhi
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Nhi

Tutor North Adelaide, SA
In my opinion, it's most important to help students to understand basic concepts and theories when tutoring them. With these knowledge, students will have confidence to overcome problems and hardness in Maths by themselves. For the past two years, I have tutored several students in Physics and Maths, especially Math Methods year 11 and 12.…
Masuma
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Masuma

Tutor Broadview, SA
I think spending time to change your whole approach of teaching because one of your student is unable to understand the whole content. Being honest and flexible is very important things a tutor can have. Flexible, patient, good listener and helping nature. Being flexible about the teaching approach because every individual has different way of…
Gia Khanh
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Gia Khanh

Tutor Adelaide, SA
I can establish a trusted relationship with my student because once they feel comfortable around me, they will not hesitate to ask questions and will be confident to share their interests and gain new knowledge. When explaining new concepts, I can also break them into smaller parts so that my student will feel less pressure. Finally, since…
Zarnab
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Zarnab

Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do includes, listening carefully to the students, being creative and flexible with learning styles, building relationship with student, being patient with students at all times, and teaching students how to solve problems. My greatest strength as a tutor is my ability to differentiate instruction to meet the…

Local Reviews

Agnes is great. After Agnes left, Zak spent the next two hours doing math problems in his book, which I have never seen him do voluntarily before. Agnes really boosted his confidence in a single session so we are very pleased. Thanks for pairing her with Zak. We were very impressed. Agnes is clearly a very smart young professional, and has a natural talent for teaching.
Nathan

Inside WoodvilleTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 9 student Alice focused on expanding and factorising algebraic expressions, practising with a range of variable terms for accuracy.

For Year 10, Marcus worked through trigonometric ratios—using sin, cos, and tan—to solve right-angled triangle problems and applied these skills to questions involving angles of elevation and depression.

Meanwhile, Year 6 student Noah revised time calculations alongside area and perimeter measurement tasks, using visual examples to strengthen his understanding.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student arrived without having completed the assigned algebra practice, which made the session less productive; as one tutor observed, "more questions need to be done before class."

In Year 11 trigonometry, over-reliance on mental calculation led to missed steps and confusion when applying sine and cosine rules—writing out longer solutions initially was recommended.

A primary student working on time struggled with converting hours to seconds, highlighting gaps in foundational process rather than content.

Meanwhile, a Year 10 learner avoided writing full workings for factorising tasks, resulting in repeated sign errors that weren't caught until feedback was given.

Recent Achievements

One Woodville tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student who used to guess answers on rearrangement questions but now writes out each step, slowing down to check her work and catching small errors herself.

In a recent session with a Year 8 student, the tutor observed her moving from silent struggle to talking through worded maths problems aloud, which helped her solve them much faster than before.

Meanwhile, a younger student in Year 4 who previously hesitated with time-telling is now able to confidently read times from an analogue clock and has even started subtracting fractions independently during their lesson.

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 Civic Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Sports College South Australia - St. Clair YMCA Recreation Centre.