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Tutors in Five Dock include a university lecturer twice named best in faculty, a Maths Olympiad high distinction recipient, HSC dux and ATAR 98+ achievers, seasoned peer mentors, STEM captains, early childhood specialists, award-winning speech competitors, state-level athletes, and tutors with proven experience inspiring K–12 students across maths, science, English and beyond.

Elliott
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Elliott

Psychology Tutor Ultimo, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help them to understand basics and inner workings of a topic thoroughly enough that they feel intuition regarding it, and are able to build upon this foundation to further develop ideas independently. My biggest strength as a tutor is my writing ability. I am able to help students…
Dharani
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Dharani

Psychology Tutor Wolli Creek, NSW
As a tutor, I aim to explore needs of every student to provide individually-tailored teaching in uncovering students' maximum potential. Aside from merely imparting knowledge, I believe it highly important to consistently motivate students who lack interest in studies, yet also preventing students from becoming over-stressed to the extent of…
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Ana
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Ana

Psychology Tutor Mascot, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is not just provide the student with the knowledge that they need for a course or for a test but that they can learn along the way the methods which help them learn best so they can apply those methods to future challenges. In other words, how they figure out one problem or completing one task…
Kevin Yunxiao
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Kevin Yunxiao

Psychology Tutor Macquarie Park, NSW
Show them that mistakes are a part of success (since some students see mistakes eg on test papers as a sign of hopelessness). Also, understanding the student's need and situation, this will give a better teacher-student interaction. Breaking down the concepts, ie giving examples that provide an explanation for the content Interpersonal and…
Alejandra
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Alejandra

Psychology Tutor Crows Nest, NSW
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to show students how amazing and talented they are and how capable they are of making great thing with amazing guidance. I create really dinámica classes and I have a great relationship with my students and their parents. I believe there can not be a positive learning environment if you don't…
Shourya
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Shourya

Psychology Tutor Neutral Bay, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is truly understand them. By this I mean understand who they are as a person and as a student. This allows you to achieve clarity on weaknesses, goals, ambitions and drive to understand allowing you to adjust your teaching style and content to align with their preferences. I think my biggest…
krisha
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krisha

Psychology Tutor Zetland, NSW
I believe one of the most important things a tutor can do is help a student believe in their own ability to learn and grow. It’s not just about explaining the material—it’s about building their confidence and showing them that they’re capable of success. Often, students already have the potential; they just need someone to remind them…
Ragini
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Ragini

Psychology Tutor Ermington, NSW
Imparting knowledge and not just from the textbooks, I mean in general terms a bond between a tutor and a student is beautiful. A tutor can teach a lot of things to the student and a tutor can also learn and experience new things from a student. My strengths as a tutor would be that I have good leadership qualities. I have the patience required to…
Sophia
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Sophia

Psychology Tutor Macquarie Park, NSW
Be there for them! It’s important for tutors to be patient and kind to their students - give them the time they need to understand the material and be mindful of what works and doesn’t. Getting results is important, but building a rapport with the students is as crucial in helping them do better. Teaching is about inspiring and lending a…
Eva
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Eva

Psychology Tutor Auburn, NSW

Local Reviews

James has been very polite and helpful.
Tracey, Haberfield

Inside Five DockTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Charlotte worked through trigonometry and measurement problems, including Pythagoras' theorem and calculating area and volume for her upcoming exam.

Year 10 student Angelique revised expanding and factorising algebraic expressions as well as tackled percentage-based problem solving to prepare for half-yearly assessments.

Meanwhile, Year 5 student Blake focused on narrative planning exercises before writing a short story using his plan, also practicing reading comprehension with summary questions from short texts.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 mathematics, one student's working out was difficult to follow—steps weren't clearly shown, which made it hard for the marker to understand her process and spot where errors occurred. "She knows how to answer the questions, it is just about showing the marker how she got to her answer," a tutor observed after reviewing algebra exercises.

Meanwhile, in Year 5 English, homework completion has become inconsistent; missing weekly tasks led to gaps in reading comprehension practice.

During a timed selective school writing task in Year 7, another student lost focus mid-way and left several sections unfinished—confidence seemed to dip when challenged by unfamiliar prompts.

Recent Achievements

One Five Dock tutor noticed a Year 11 student who previously struggled with calculus now confidently working through differentiation problems, clearly showing each step and explaining how she tested the nature of stationary points.

In English, a Year 10 boy recently submitted his creative writing on *Of Mice and Men*—not only did he capture the novel's style, but for the first time handed in his draft on time after weeks of late submissions.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who once hesitated to ask for help during reading tasks is now referring back to her book whenever unsure, summarising key events accurately 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 Five Dock Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Five Dock Public School.