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Ashton's tutors include a PhD-qualified science educator with secondary teaching experience, a robotics Olympiad prize-winner and National Youth Science Forum participant (ATAR 99.55), seasoned Kumon maths instructors, peer mentors in English and music, ATAR 98–99.95 scorers, a gymnastics coach of six years, and university students excelling in physics, engineering and medicine.

Lily
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Lily

Psychology Tutor Teringie, SA
The most important thing would be to teach a student that studying shouldn't be a chore, and that giving it their all matters more than receiving a perfect grade. I understand that each student is different, and that not every approach will work for an individual, so it is essential that their tutor knows how to adapt to their needs while still…
Tina Chenxi
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Tina Chenxi

Psychology Tutor Myrtle Bank, SA
1. The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them become more confident with themselves about their ability to achieve the grade they want in the subject they want. As a wise person once said, "if you believe, you're already half way there." As a tutor I want to be able to help my students believe in themselves so they realise…
1st Lesson Trial

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Daniel
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Daniel

Psychology Tutor Toorak Gardens, SA
- Facilitate open discussion about the stresses, intricacies, and difficulties of schooling (especially in Year 12) - Explain the same concept as a student's classroom teacher but in a way that is digestible to the student (offering a personal approach) - Be able to provide detailed feedback and/or comprehensive drafts for assignments and…
Mostafa Didar
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Mostafa Didar

Psychology Tutor Norwood, SA
Besides helping them understand and learn a topic, the tutor should also help the student master the topic through mastery learning. Mastery learning is a way of designing units of work so that each set of tasks focuses on a particular learning objective and students must master a task to move onto the next one. The tutor should also help the…
Umama
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Umama

Psychology Tutor Dulwich, SA
I think that being able to build a rapport with the student is one of the fundamental skills to be a good tutor. This lays the foundation for the student being comfortable in asking questions to the tutor, as well as the tutor finding a teaching style that is most suited to the student. I am confident in my ability to explain subject matter to the…
Sanjana
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Sanjana

Psychology Tutor Hectorville, SA
The most crucial things an instructor can do, in my opinion, are to boost confidence, provide individualised advice, and establish a secure environment for enquiries and candid self-evaluation. I can offer helpful criticism and useful techniques, like as dividing work into manageable portions, by allowing students to freely express their actual…
Therese
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Therese

Psychology Tutor Paradise, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to ultimately inspire them in a love of learning and hopefully pass onto them capsules of knowledge which are priceless. My strengths as a tutor are to challenge the pupils to think abstractly about language and harness the true power it possesses. I love hearing the pupil's own…

Local Reviews

Josh is very professional, understands my complex needs and seems like a lovely person as well.
Jana, Carey Gully

Inside AshtonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Fractions work included addition and subtraction with both common and different denominators, plus simplifying mixed numbers, using diagrams and quick writes to reinforce understanding.

In Year 10, Alyssia tackled chemistry concepts like titrations—calculating molar ratios and manipulating equations such as n = m/M and C = n/V—and also prepared for her exam by balancing redox equations and working through net ionic equations.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student focused on surds, logs, and indices for an upcoming test, practising simplification of expressions involving these forms as well as reviewing basic index laws.

Recent Challenges

A Year 3 student struggled to maintain focus and produced handwriting that was difficult to read, with inconsistent use of capital letters mid-sentence—"sentences need to be conscientious and not rambling," a tutor observed.

In Year 10 Chemistry, reliance on formula sheets meant the student hesitated to attempt molar ratio questions without checking previous answers, slowing progress on unfamiliar problems.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 Maths student often avoided tackling abstract or "outside the box" questions unless guided, tending instead to repeat familiar processes rather than experiment with new approaches. This led to uncertainty when test formats shifted unexpectedly.

Recent Achievements

One Ashton tutor recently saw a Year 9 student move from relying on prompts for fraction problems to confidently working through them with minimal help, especially recognising when to use commas in writing—something that used to trip him up.

In a senior chemistry session, Alyssia shifted from needing step-by-step support on titration equations to solving even complex mixed-ratio questions independently by the end of the lesson.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student arrived well-prepared, quickly identified exactly which quadratic concepts he wanted clarified, and guided the session by asking targeted questions—showing far more initiative than before.

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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Norton Summit Primary School.