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Tutors in Grange include a seasoned secondary teacher with postgraduate credentials in education and psychology, an ATAR 98.65 scorer and Maths Olympiad awardee, university Dean's List scholars, a specialist K–12 English/Maths tutor, a QUT PhD researcher focused on children's learning, experienced chess coaches, creative arts competition winners, and passionate mentors in STEM and writing.

Nelson
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Nelson

Economics Tutor South Brisbane, QLD
One of the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is give the student motivation to learn and ultimately excel academically. In a more practical sense, a tutor's ability to explain concepts and ideas that broaden the student's perspective and understanding of a certain topic is another essential influence a tutor can have on a…
Kim
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Kim

Economics Tutor Highgate Hill, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is teach them how to think and learn. This is far more valuable for future work and study than any one topic to be learnt. My principle strength as a tutor would be my understanding of how mathematical concepts work, which helps me to explain them. I do this often with my colleagues during…
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Pratik
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Pratik

Economics Tutor Woolloongabba, QLD
A tutor can basically develop students interest in the field which he/she is not interested in,and make learning happy to go for the students. I think my ability to get involved into the students and understanding their strengths and…
Simone
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Simone

Economics Tutor St Lucia, QLD
As previously mentioned, I think the most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to listen. If you do not listen to the students expectations and responsiveness to the material then the sessions will not be productive, and the student will not improve. My strengths are that I am an incredibly patient tutor, as well as a good listener.…
James
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James

Economics Tutor Annerley, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is be able to get them back in the right direction when they are lost. To give the student the tools and knowledge to be able to further their own learning. My strengths as a tutor in particular are my versatility. Studying my second course I have obtained strong skills as well as a variety…

Local Reviews

Rueben has been a great fit for Gabrielle. He is an excellent tutor and goes through the steps for the maths problems. Gabrielle feels he explains things so she can understand. Rueben is very easy to talk to and he communicates with us. He is also up with the curriculum.
Monette, Grange

Inside GrangeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 9 student Tom worked through solving simultaneous equations and practiced simplifying surds using step-by-step methods.

In Year 10, Chloe focused on quadratic equations and explored applications of financial mathematics such as simple and compound interest.

Meanwhile, Year 8 student Priya tackled trigonometry—specifically the sine rule—and applied it to real-world triangle problems using visual diagrams.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 maths, a student tended to avoid writing out full solutions in algebra and instead tried to "do it in her head," which led to repeated errors—her tutor noted, "needs to write out solutions instead of doing problems in her head to avoid mistakes."

In senior years, one student preparing for trigonometry questions focused revision only on familiar question types rather than challenging multi-step problems, resulting in difficulty when faced with new formats during lessons.

Meanwhile, a primary student skipped over tricky words rather than persisting, missing chances to build confidence with decoding unfamiliar patterns.

Recent Achievements

One Grange tutor noted that a Year 10 student who previously hesitated to ask for help now regularly works through tricky trig questions independently, only reaching out when truly stuck.

A Year 8 learner has begun catching and correcting her own mistakes while reading aloud—last session, she fixed small errors on the spot rather than skipping past them as before.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student showed new initiative by voicing doubts whenever unsure about word problems; this was a big shift from earlier weeks where she'd stay silent or guess. Last lesson, she asked for clarification and solved all assigned questions accurately.

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 Grange Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Wilston State School.