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Applecross's tutors include a former school principal and international educator, a classroom teacher with over 25 years' experience across primary and secondary levels, ATAR 99+ scholars and academic award-winners, an Olympiad-recognised maths talent, experienced peer mentors, accomplished university science students, and a language centre founder with a decade of global teaching expertise.

Tessa
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Tessa

Psychology Tutor Nedlands, WA
Being patient with a student has to be the most important. Learning isn’t the same for everyone and some areas of learning are harder for some people. Remaining patient and staying kind while a child is learning is extremely important. I am a patient person, who can think creatively and how to teach subjects in different ways to suit different…
Emilie
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Emilie

Psychology Tutor Bentley, WA
Being kind and helpful to their needs. Listening to them and their parents. Being knowledgeable enough to help them or willing to learn to help them. Be a reliable source of help and help them as much as possible. I am very helpful in identifying their problems and drawbacks, I am effective in changing behaviours to give them an advantage or edge.…
1st Lesson Trial

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Divya
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Divya

Psychology Tutor Willetton, WA
I think the most important things a tutor can do are to make the student feel understood, build their confidence, and explain concepts in a way that truly makes sense to them. As someone who is still a student myself, I know how overwhelming things can get, so I try to create a comfortable space where they are not afraid to ask questions or make…
Luke
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Luke

Psychology Tutor Victoria Park, WA
Impart upon a student not knowledge per se, but rather a desire to expand their own knowledge through self-directed learning. Learning and education should be a lifelong process, not one that ends when an individual completes their primary vocational education. Learning makes us grow and develop and look at things in different ways, and the desire…
Nikita
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Nikita

Psychology Tutor Wilson, WA
In my opinion, the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to break a concept down to its simplest form. In my school days, I often found this to be the easiest way to learn. If your basic foundation of any concept is strong, it gets much easier to build on that and learn more complex information pertaining to it. Moreover, being…
Diksha
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Diksha

Psychology Tutor Victoria Park, WA
teach them in the best way possible for the individual needs of the child patience, resilience,…
Manar
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Manar

Psychology Tutor Lynwood, WA
A tutor needs to teach a student, obviously. But more importantly, a tutor needs to empower a student. To make them break through barriers they wouldn’t have thought were possible, to achieve their potential, plus a little more. Tutors should also be more personalised, not so just a second teacher. Tutors should recognise why this specific…
Elizabeth
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Elizabeth

Psychology Tutor Alfred Cove, WA
Help the student to fulfill their potential and build their self-esteem in school Being succinct, organised and knowledgable about the material. I am also patient and…
Jack
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Jack

Psychology Tutor Como, WA
Being in tune with their academic functioning level and helping them to reach their potential. Being a mentor in life and in studies. Being able to facilitate a fun learning environment for them to develop an interest in academics. I am patient, approachable and engaging. I have had several years of private tutoring experience. I enjoy working…
Hetvi
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Hetvi

Psychology Tutor Rossmoyne, WA
I think that the most important thing a tutor can do is build the student's confidence in themselves and their own abilities so that the student is able to realise that with a little guidance and support they can achieve anything they want. I think my biggest strength as a tutor is that I have the patience required to explain a new challenging…
Alexie
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Alexie

Psychology Tutor Bicton, WA
Believe in the student's ability to learn and improve. Everyone has the capacity to succeed, enjoy learning, and become more confident in their own ability to improve! I am very patient - I believe it is important to make sure concepts are understood before moving on. I am confident in breaking scientific concepts down into simpler terms…
Shannon
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Shannon

Psychology Tutor Nedlands, WA
I believe that it is important for a tutor to provide constructive but fair feedback to their students, while also providing practical advice and support to them, so they can improve in areas where they were originally struggling. I believe that I am a patient and understanding person, who is quite personable and can talk to people easily. I have…
Akshaya
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Akshaya

Psychology Tutor Shelley, WA
A tutor must be very patient, approachable, and accepting, as students should feel safe and comfortable enough to ask any question without facing any judgment. A warm and friendly environment must be established. This is the most effective way for a student to learn, and be open to learning. A tutor must also be able to provide examples of the…
Michael
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Michael

Psychology Tutor Bull Creek, WA
It is a necessity for a tutor to establish rapport with their students. As a proponent of a theory in rapport for learners, it is important that the student and teacher must sense each other, sync in their teaching and learning process and experience an affirming positive experience while educating. I am very creative in teaching my students. I…
Aliah
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Aliah

Psychology Tutor Hilton, WA
I think the most important is to follow the students lead. They will often know their weaknesses and from spending time working with them, you can take note of possible areas of improvement. However, at the end of the day you are there to help the student so by listening and communicating effectively both parties will be satisfied. The ability to…
Katherine
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Katherine

Psychology Tutor Perth, WA
Listen and teach. I think it is so important for students to be listened to and helped accordingly. They must be given the space to work through problems they are facing themselves so that they can believe in their own abilities and increase their own self-efficacy. It is vital that the student can not only regurgitate an answer or process but…
arya
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arya

Psychology Tutor Parkwood, WA
be understandable trying to breakdown the matters to a simpler form for them understand…
Anthony
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Anthony

Psychology Tutor Northbridge, WA
I believe that instilling self-belief and critical thinking is the most important things a tutor can do for their student. Reflecting on my year 12 as got a score that I felt wasn't enough for medicine (96.00 ATAR), I have learnt to become someone who is collaborative and believes in a growth mindset after my a failure. in Year 12. I believe…

Local Reviews

Have been with Ezymath for about a month. Their admin is good in communication and managing the tutors. Our tutor has been reliable and is knowledgable on our son's subjects.
Emmanuel Arandiga, Applecross

Inside ApplecrossTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Jack practised calculating area, length, and perimeter of shapes and worked through times tables for improved recall.

In Year 8, Ava explored linear equations before starting an investigation on parabolas, then compared pie charts with introductory algebra to build confidence in interpreting data.

Meanwhile, a Year 9 student reviewed test material covering measurements and percentages alongside calculations with equations and matrices, focusing on efficient problem-solving methods.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student working on matrices and data interpretation left several homework tasks incomplete, as noted: "didn't do homework," which meant less opportunity to clarify errors with mean, mode, and median.

In Year 8 algebra, test planning issues led to only 42% on a problem-solving assessment—time was spent re-checking calculations instead of moving forward.

A Year 4 student preparing for word problems often avoided writing out workings for subtraction and multiplication, erasing repeatedly when answers felt imperfect. In the moment, this made reviewing strategies difficult and slowed overall progress during lessons.

Recent Achievements

One Applecross tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to guess on statistics questions now carefully checks for the right graph—she can clearly explain when to use histograms versus box-and-whisker plots, which was a real sticking point before.

A Year 9 boy, after weeks of confusing mode and median, started pausing to double-check which measure fits each question, instead of rushing ahead and mixing them up.

In a younger session, a Year 4 girl who once hesitated with multi-digit addition solved two- and three-digit word problems independently and asked for more challenging sums at the end.

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 Square Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Benedict's School.