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Tutors in Greenhill include a PhD-qualified science educator with secondary teaching experience, national robotics and science competition winners, multiple ATAR 97–99.6+ graduates, university students in medicine, law and engineering, seasoned K–12 music and debating mentors, peer leaders in maths and English, accomplished youth sports coaches, and award-winning creative writers.

Sonam
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Sonam

Economics Tutor St Morris, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make things easy for the students to learn. This means by making the students understand and gain knowledge easily which will help them for the long run. As a tutor,my strengths are mainly my communication skills and am very good at figuring out the weak spot of a student. I am…
Anant
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Anant

Economics Tutor Eastwood, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their students is to foster a supportive and encouraging learning environment. This involves not only teaching the material but also building the student’s confidence in their own abilities. A tutor should inspire curiosity and provide the tools for students to become independent learners, so they feel…
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Matthew
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Matthew

Economics Tutor Highgate, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is give a student tools with which to find answers for future questions. I am accessible and personable, and enjoy relating to students and their specific educational situation. I am able to break down concepts into understandable chunks, and I love to use analogies to achieve…
yashnit
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yashnit

Economics Tutor Hectorville, SA
In my opinion, tutors can help students in setting goals and achieve them from time to time. As a leader, they need to implement situational leadership and try to incorporate different teaching methods for different kinds of students. My strengths would basically include my communication skills and assertiveness with the students. In addition, I…
Thomas
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Thomas

Economics Tutor Evandale, SA
One of the most important roles of a tutor is to provide students with a framework of learning techniques and methods that will remain applicable in future areas of study. A tutor should also foster a love or appreciation of learning through active engagement with their pupils; this is by far the most important thing a tutor can do for a student.…
Mason
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Mason

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to inspire their curiosity and desire for learning because it is their desire that will ultimately drive them to succeed. I think my strength as a tutor is my personality. I'm very kind, patient, and funny. I always find a way to make learning more…
Suyash
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Suyash

Economics Tutor Campbelltown, SA
A tutor needs to be patient when tutoring a student especially in subjects like mathematics and physics since those subjects require the most assumed knowledge in high school than any other subject, students normally have trouble recollecting previous works. Therefore, it is important for a tutor to start from the very basic concepts, if the…
Paramveer Singh
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Paramveer Singh

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
Supporting them through thick and thin and making sure they can understand topics and apply them to problems not limited to books but to other subjects too. A simple example would be application of basic and complext algebra throughout econ, accounting and finance. Also making sure that a student can approach an examination a certain way, that…
Jessica
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Jessica

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to be prepared for each session, including having a strong grasp of the content, being able to answer and explain each of the questions the student has. Having the ability to transfer the knowledge the tutor has to the student in a way that is easy to understand and is also correct is…
Tamika
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Tamika

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
Listen to the students need and understand them as a learner what the goals they strive for. Everyone learns differently and no one is looking for the same experience or results from a class. It is important for a tutor to understand and apply this in their teachings. My ability to view a concept in a variety of ways. When a student doesn't…
Maria
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Maria

Economics Tutor Millswood, SA
The important thing is to develop the student's ability to independently study. It is like that proverb 'Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.' There are going to be times where the student will find themselves in a position with an urgent question regarding their assignment which is…
Tsz Yan
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Tsz Yan

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
As a student who was not born with a gift, I've been looking for different ways to improve my academic performance, and to find the most suitable method for myself to study. As a result, I am aware of the significance of a suitable study method. Other than teaching the content of the textbook, I would be more than happy to assist students in…
Mitali
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Mitali

Economics Tutor Adelaide, SA
The tutor should just not stick to the knowledge that is available in the textbooks but should make learning a fun experience for the students by giving relevant examples . Learning becomes more easier when the students are involved in the process. The session must be interactive. I am a active listener and communicator. I feel that every student…

Local Reviews

Josh has got off to a good start with Owen. He is always much happier once he has had an hour with Owen going through his Math. We see it is helping Josh with his confidence. At this point, thumbs up and wish we had done this a year ago...hindsight is a gift.
Paul

Inside GreenhillTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Alyssia focused on adding and subtracting mixed number fractions with different denominators, then practised creative writing using commas and exclamation points.

In Year 9, James revised coordinate geometry by graphing points in different quadrants and determining if given points lie on specific lines.

For Year 11 Chemistry, Alyssia tackled titration calculations by applying molar ratios and rearranging n = m/M and C × V equations to solve practical problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 4 student's session highlighted ongoing challenges with handwriting—mid-sentence capital letters and rambling sentences made their work hard to follow, sometimes causing ideas to get lost.

In a Year 10 algebra lesson, the tutor observed: "He preferred to look at what he'd already done rather than try new questions," revealing an over-reliance on prior answers instead of attempting unfamiliar problems.

Meanwhile, a senior chemistry student repeatedly referenced formulas instead of applying concepts independently during multi-step calculations; this slowed progress when adapting methods to new types of exam questions. The hesitation lingered even as test deadlines approached.

Recent Achievements

One Greenhill tutor noticed that Oscar, a Year 5 student who previously hesitated with fractions, was able to work through fraction problems almost independently this week and started using commas correctly to separate ideas in his writing after reminders.

In a recent high school session, Alyssia showed real progress in chemistry: after needing step-by-step support with titration equations at first, she completed mixed-ratio questions entirely on her own by the end of the lesson.

Meanwhile, Lucy, also in high school, demonstrated new initiative by identifying her weak points in statistics and tackling practice questions with far less reliance on previous examples 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 Burnside Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Peter's Collegiate Girls' School.