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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Mawson include an Australian Science Olympiad Physics Summer School invitee and ATAR 99.70 scorer, a Marist College Dux with national maths awards and extensive coaching experience, a mechanical engineer and former private maths tutor, peer mentors for K–12 students, university medalists, and specialist science graduates passionate about teaching and mentoring kids.

Greg
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Greg

PDHPE Tutor Monash, ACT
As a reliable and motivational tutor, I lead by example demonstrating initiative to commence and finish projects. I set clear expectations and monitor performance against agreed plans with key performance indicators. As trust, confidence and good performance is further demonstrated, I encourage initiative and reward students with more autonomy. I…
James
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James

PDHPE Tutor Isabella Plains, ACT
Maintaining a positive, calm, and supportive attitude whilst aiding the students forward in their studies. Clear communication and explanation is crucial to effective absorbtion of information. Great communication and support skills due to past experience. Engaging and a natural problem-solver that hopes to create insight and extend further…
1st Lesson Trial

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Emily
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Emily

PDHPE Tutor Acton, ACT
I think the most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is listen. Listen to their problem, why they may not understand a concept, and then help to solve the problem together. I think that having fun, is also very important. One of my main goals aside from helping a student understand the content, is to help the student enjoy the…
Kaitlyn
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Kaitlyn

PDHPE Tutor Duffy, ACT
Be understanding as not the same method is gonna work for all students so me being flexible and encouraging to support them in finding the best way which works for them is the most imperative thing to get them were they wanna be I feel my caring patient qualities would help especially with younger kids to establish a relationship in order to be…
Nicholas
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Nicholas

PDHPE Tutor Acton, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to actively listen regarding what the student needs help with. This will ensure the student will get the most of his/her session. Being able to actively listening to student feedback will be vital to becoming a successful tutor. Being able to adapt to each individuals learning style as no…
Chloe
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Chloe

PDHPE Tutor Canberra, ACT
One of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is listen to them. This is the only way to know what they don't understand and where they need help. Positive feedback is also essential in tutoring. If the student feels like they aren't making any progress and that they will never understand the problem, then they may give up all…

Local Reviews

All going well, Iris is great.
Almay

Inside MawsonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Harry worked on simplifying fractions and ratios by finding common factors, then practiced applying BODMAS to solve equations in the correct order.

In Year 9, Emily focused on index laws—including multiplication and division of powers—and began using scientific notation for large numbers.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Jacob learned how to find the turning point of a parabola and practiced graphing quadratic equations, using Desmos for visual support.

Recent Challenges

Most of the homework was done incorrectly, but when done in person he did them flawlessly—suggesting that independent practice and applying feedback outside sessions need strengthening.

In Year 9, messy formatting when working with hyperbolae led to confusion and repeated errors; one note said, needs to format her questions and answers a little better.

A Year 11 student frequently tried to solve quadratics entirely in their head rather than using pen and paper, resulting in missed steps and uncertainty about the underlying process.

Recent Achievements

In Year 6, one student who previously hesitated to speak up began talking aloud as she worked through challenging percentage and conversion problems—something she'd avoided before.

During a high school session, a Year 10 student independently corrected mistakes from his homework on quadratic factorisation, showing new self-reliance rather than waiting for hints.

Another senior student, after struggling with hyperbolae last week, was able to clearly explain the intercepts out loud and confidently analyse scatter plots by herself during the latest session.

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 Woden Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Melrose High School.