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Private information-processing-technology tutors that come to you in person or online

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Artarmon's tutors include a university mathematics lecturer and honours graduate, an award-winning PhD physicist with seven years' teaching experience, peer mentors from North Sydney Boys and Chatswood High, seasoned private tutors with ATARs up to 98.2, school Duxes, Olympiad achievers, and educators experienced in both K–12 and international classrooms.

Quang Khai
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Quang Khai

Info Processing Tutor Chippendale, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is help a student believe in themselves. Good tutoring isn’t just about explaining the material — it’s about building confidence, curiosity, and independence. A tutor should listen carefully, adapt to each student’s needs, and celebrate their progress along the way. When students feel…
Monica
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Monica

Info Processing Tutor Sydney, NSW
The most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is to inspire the students to develop a curiosity for learning and to explore the subject more. My strengths are that I am a very good listener and I am easily able to be empathetic towards kids. I am friendly and approachable. Also, I have good knowledge of my subject matter, so that I…
1st Lesson Trial

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Sparsh
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Sparsh

Info Processing Tutor Chippendale, NSW
A tutor can make a student love the subject he/she hates. The most important thing for a tutor is to understand the student, his/her interests, aptitude, and what he/she is inclined towards. If you have a basic idea of the student mindset you can develop techniques to make them understand the subject in a way they don't find it hard. Gamification…
Rishad
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Rishad

Info Processing Tutor Redfern, NSW
Be an attentive listener then explain the concept in the way your student will best understand it. It is imperative to first observe where your student's thought process is going wrong and subsequently resolve your student's doubts by communicating effectively and calmly. Patience, most tutors give up after their students don't follow along with…
Zac
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Zac

Info Processing Tutor Beacon Hill, NSW
To ensure a student can be tutored effectively, they have to feel open about discussing topics and concepts they do not understand well which can be daunting. Thus, by maintaining a friendly and welcoming personality and relationship as a tutor, students are able to be more open about their weaknesses, allowing for me to tailor myself to their…
John
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John

Info Processing Tutor Stanmore, NSW
I think the core role of a tutor is to help students reach their full potential. A tutor should tailor their approach for each student to achieve this. This should include helping students to become independent by developing their study skills and self-confidence. I have worked with a range of people and understand that everyone learns and…

Local Reviews

The tutoring is definitely going well. He has a really good rapport with Minyu.
Danielle, Lane Cove

Inside ArtarmonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 12 student Josh worked through HSC physics exam questions focused on electromagnetism and the photoelectric effect, with extra practice on mass defect calculations.

In Year 11, Priya tackled circular functions by sketching graphs, finding x-intercepts, and using unit circle values for exact results.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Alex addressed exponential growth and decay problems along with probability applications involving combinations and permutations.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Physics, a student's long-answer responses often lacked clarity and technical terms—need to slowly incorporate more technical terms in physics long answers and be more succinct, as one tutor observed. This resulted in answers that were harder to mark and sometimes missed key points.

Meanwhile, in Year 12 Mathematics, over-reliance on the CAS calculator for routine algebra ("try to avoid over-reliance on CAS") meant foundational steps weren't always written out or understood, leading to small but costly algebraic mistakes during exams.

In both subjects, skipping explicit working made it difficult to identify where errors crept in under time pressure.

Recent Achievements

One Artarmon tutor noted a Year 11 student who, after previously losing marks for incomplete explanations in physics tests, now writes much more structured and coherent answers—recently scoring higher by clearly linking calculations to concepts.

A Year 10 student who once hesitated to tackle graph sketching questions now confidently completes derivative-based problems and even volunteers to try extra examples during sessions.

Meanwhile, a younger student made a noticeable shift: rather than just following along, she set up her own diagrams when working through force identification tasks, showing real independence as she finished all required examples 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 Artarmon Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Artarmon Public School.