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Private psychology tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit Guarantee
100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Mackenzie's tutors include an OP1 school dux and medical science student, a 99.70 ATAR subject dux in maths and sciences, an IB 40 graduate with multiple high distinctions, experienced K–12 and elocution tutors, peer mentors and youth coaches, award-winning academic achievers, leadership program participants, and specialist subject tutors across English, STEM and the arts.

Sophie
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Sophie

Psychology Tutor Holland Park, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do is give a student the tools and resources to be able to succeed and learn on their own, and giving them assistance whenever they might need it. My strengths when it comes to tutoring are that I'm patient, understanding, and empathetic. Being patient and understanding are some of the most important qualities…
Dylan
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Dylan

Psychology Tutor Holland Park West, QLD
Give consistent, constructive, and detailed feedback as well as explaining all doubts the student has until there are no more questions and they fully understand the concept. Not only is helping kids with their work, the most important thing but also to help motivate themselves and become independent learners. Patience and empathy. Studying is not…
1st Lesson Trial

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Shianne
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Shianne

Psychology Tutor Robertson, QLD
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is provide an opportunity for the student to thrive. To establish belief in them, as typically students seek out tutoring as they believe they are not 'good' at a subject. Being the one person there that cheers them on is a powerful thing. Providing alternate methods for students to learn is…
Hoi Yan
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Hoi Yan

Psychology Tutor Runcorn, QLD
I believe tutoring helps students develop a genuine love for learning. There are 2 characteristics a tutor needs to achieve this. Firstly, the tutor should have an open and friendly personality. Learning is inherently effortful, and having someone friendly to guide the process makes it more enjoyable and productive. Additionally, tutors need to…
Ding
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Ding

Psychology Tutor Sunnybank Hills, QLD
Being a tutor is not only about delivering contents and information, it is more about supporting and developing students interest in a certain field. Most importantly, i think confidence is the key for students in a learning process, as a tutor, I’d positively encourage them even if they make mistakes in their work. I am friendly, caring, and…
Damini
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Damini

Psychology Tutor Woolloongabba, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for the student is to take time to understand their expectations and needs as well as motivate the student to do better using appreciation and engagement. As a tutor, using relevant and relatable examples to explain concepts, providing important tips to remember and understand is the content are my…
muntaha
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muntaha

Psychology Tutor Rochedale South, QLD
Educators play an important role in how students minds are shaped and how they approach problems in their studies. Believing in students that they can achieve their goal is one of the most important aspects of teaching them so it encourages them to strive towards their goal rather than realise they aren't capable enough. Watching them set out a…
Zaakiyah
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Zaakiyah

Psychology Tutor Eight Mile Plains, QLD
Firstly to help them understand something that they may be scared or ashamed of not knowing. Also, to help teach special small techniques to quicken solutions. I'm super open and friendly and have a lot of patience, so I can sit and understand what the problem is before rushing and forcing the student to hop…

Local Reviews

She is perfect!!!
Marita

Inside MackenzieTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 9 student Will worked through challenging quadratics and binomial distributions from his schoolwork, focusing on advanced problem-solving.

In Year 10, Helena reviewed finance maths by tackling compound interest scenarios and applying recurrence relations to model real-world problems.

For a younger learner in Year 6, Sophia practiced algebra by re-arranging equations to solve for x and simplifying expressions using step-by-step examples.

Recent Challenges

Severely underprepared considering time constraint, a Year 9 student left too much study to the last minute—this led to a visible drop in confidence during practice.

In Year 10, another student avoided writing out steps when solving algebra questions, often saying, "I can do this in my head," but sign errors crept in without working shown.

A Year 7 learner's homework was repeatedly incomplete, meaning feedback couldn't be applied and gaps persisted into classwork.

In primary English, messy handwriting and inconsistent punctuation made story drafts hard to revise; ideas got lost before they reached the page.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Mackenzie noticed one Year 11 student who had struggled with index laws was able to explain them back confidently and apply the rules in new questions, showing a real shift from guessing to self-assured problem-solving.

Another high schooler, after finding Venn diagrams confusing at first, began using them independently to break down tricky word problems.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student who previously needed a number chart for counting managed to reach 200 unaided and started skipping numbers both forwards and backwards on his own initiative. He ended the session by counting out loud without any prompts.

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 Mount Gravatt Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Mackenzie State Primary School.