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Tutors in Yattalunga include an award-winning K–12 teacher and university mentor, a PhD physicist and lecturer with international academic honours, experienced early childhood educators, maths and English specialists with degrees in education, peer mentors, creative writers, Olympiad competitors, and dedicated youth leaders—each bringing real classroom expertise and standout academic achievements to every lesson.

Stacey
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Stacey

Tutor Blakeview, SA
Help them understand the material, encourage their strengths and support them when they find something difficult I believe I'm good at helping people understand information, being able to explain things simply and…
John Renzo
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John Renzo

Tutor Blakeview, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to help them excel and accomplish their improvement in subjects. Also to add is to build good relationship with them. As a tutor in my university, I learned to have trust on each other because it builds harmony to the relationship resulting to better outcome. My strengths as a tutor is…
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Tamika
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Tamika

Tutor Blakeview, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be able to help the student reach their full potential and to guide them on the right path My strengths would be guiding them through the process and making sure they take their time to…
Holly
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Holly

Tutor Munno Para, SA
I believe a tutor should give encouragement generously. A tutor should also empower students by teaching them skills that will help them throughout their schooling and beyond. I care about my students. I try to identify their learning style so that I'm better equipped to help them. I encourage my students to work their way through problems instead…
Molly-Jean
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Molly-Jean

Tutor Munno Para, SA
I believe that a tutor should be someone whom the student should feel comfortable asking questions. In this sense, the student should definitely feel no hestitation when asking for clarification if they do not completely understand a concept, something which is not always easy to do in a class. I believe my weaknesses as a tutor would stem from my…
Jahanzaib
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Jahanzaib

Tutor Munno Para, SA
Create a non-toxic environment where a student feel comfortable to learn and ask questions. To me I feel this to be the most important factor in learning as feeling comfortable with asking questions and knowing you won't recieve a toxic response is vital in a student excelling in a subject. Due to my past experience with customer service in…
Allana
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Allana

Tutor Evanston Gardens, SA
Have faith in them to and be patient. Give the student a chance to look over their work and develop autonomy of their learning. I allow children to build confidence. This is through giving them the terminology to explain their processes and promote an understanding of what they are…
MYLEEN
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MYLEEN

Tutor Gawler East, SA
For me, I want them to learn on their own. Guide them and teach them and do it on their own ways. And seeing them growing and achieving their goals is very important. I think its the eagerness to solve the problem and play with numbers. I will try my best to get the right answer till i am…
Ana Maria
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Ana Maria

Tutor Evanston Gardens, SA
I think the most important thing we can do as tutors is provide confidence. It’s the core of everything. Confidence radiates from knowing the content, trusting yourself with the hard work you’ve put in and reflecting upon past mistakes with a positive mindset to move forward. Whether it be in studying, work or life, confidence is key. My…
Adam
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Adam

Tutor Elizabeth Park, SA
The most important things that a tutor can do for a student are making sure that they are enjoying their time spent with the tutor and learning at a rate that is good for the student. As a tutor I believe that I am very clear in giving instructions, tutorials and explaining how to do things, i have the patience that most students need to learn a…
Nithin
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Nithin

Tutor Elizabeth Downs, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide clear explanations, offer patient guidance, foster a supportive learning environment, adapt teaching strategies to suit the student's needs, and instill confidence in their abilities. As a tutor, I believe my strengths lie in my ability to explain complex concepts in simple…
David
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David

Tutor Gawler East, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is teach them ways of learning that work for them. If they can learn properly the grades and interest in the subject should naturally follow. My strengths as a tutor lie in my good understanding of mathematics from studying it at university for 4 years, and because I have struggled for…
Taradol
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Taradol

Tutor Elizabeth Downs, SA
The things I considered to be the most important in a tutor is to help their students understand the concepts rather than giving them the answers, in this way when they are sitting the exams they know what they are doing. And be successful in the real world, when there are no tutor for them. It would be the topics that I am not quite expert in,…
Kloe
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Kloe

Tutor Smithfield, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to just help them with their work and listen to their needs and help with those needs. I think that my strengths are: - being an effective communicators - knowing how and when to give critical feedback - being able to explain concepts in a way that is different than normal - being able…
Aasif
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Aasif

Tutor Hillbank, SA
Be able to be understanding and Patient With the students to be able to help them reach their potential. And scaffold them to their needs in order for them to reach their zone of proximal development. I am studying to become a teacher, I am well versed and know how to deal with teenagers/kids due to my current job and studies. I am also very…

Local Reviews

Nehmie has been fantastic and really helped boost his confidence and knowledge.
Belinda

Inside YattalungaTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Chase worked on comparing and contrasting magazine versus newspaper features in English, then focused on interpreting a nonfiction passage about light pollution—practising skills like summarising and citing text evidence.

In Year 9, Sam concentrated on a media assignment by planning and creating a PowerPoint about newspaper conventions, which involved rewriting content after technical difficulties.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Alex revised linear equations and exponents in Maths, applying methods for solving for unknown variables through targeted practice questions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 12 student, when preparing for the Research Project, left selecting articles and note-taking until the last minute—"because of time pressure the opportunity to absorb learning is limited." This meant assignments were rushed during tutoring hours instead of being independently developed.

In Year 10 English, another student struggled to maintain focus in written work, with repetitive phrasing and blurred formality causing ideas to become muddled.

Meanwhile, a Year 7 maths student often skipped writing steps for algebraic solutions; as noted, "the written process needs practice to attain perfection," leading to confusion when checking answers later.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Yattalunga noticed that Chelsea, a high school student who previously hesitated to ask questions, now openly requests clarification when she's unsure about algebraic methods. She recently solved equations using both substitution and elimination after checking her understanding mid-session.

Caitlin, also in high school, has started revising geometry topics on her own before lessons and independently applies the Pythagoras theorem to new problems without prompting.

Meanwhile, Chase in primary school has shifted from guessing unfamiliar words to consistently breaking them down with finger-tap spelling; last session he spelled over ten tricky words accurately during a word puzzle round.

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 Evanston Gardens Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like One Tree Hill Primary School.