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Tutors in Maylands include a university maths camp co-head with IB 97.75 and perfect mathematics scores, a Master of Teaching graduate with seven years' language teaching experience, an HSC Dux with SACE merits and national science awards, seasoned K–12 English and music specialists, experienced school coaches, peer mentors, Olympiad achievers, and postgraduates in STEM fields.

Karl
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Karl

PDHPE Tutor Vale Park, SA
I have significant experience working in education and am passionate about teaching and helping young people develop both academic and personal growth. I am adaptable and flexible and am 100% committed to my students to support them through their learning journey. I always demonstrate respect and patience and will do all I can within my power to…
Prudhvi Kumar
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Prudhvi Kumar

PDHPE Tutor Blair Athol, SA
Making an easy pathway of learning for students, helping them in planning and achieving the desired output.Students should enjoy the teaching of the tutor and tutor must be willing to provide practical example to the student for better understanding of the concepts while learning. I'm very cool person and never get tired in explaining the concepts…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Vladimiros
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Vladimiros

PDHPE Tutor Athelstone, SA
Being able to identify the needs of the student. Encourage great work, even if it is a minor step in their learning to further develop their confidence in wanting to achieve and learn more. Patients and understands. Having two young school aged children myself being able to listen to their needs and finding ways to make learning fun, in a…
Karl
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Karl

PDHPE Tutor Hope Valley, SA
To boost the student's self-esteem and confidence in tackling problem-solving situations to achieve personal development and academic progress. Also, to help them pursue their field of interest and career ambitions. Forming professional yet friendly connections with students, parents, and peers allows me to better understand their challenges,…
Paige
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Paige

PDHPE Tutor Woodville, SA
I think one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to actively listen and to be organised with planning lessons. It’s really important to understand exactly what the student requires. This could be done through a pre-assessment at the start of the sessions. The tutor can then take that work home and arrange the next lesson…
Carmen
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Carmen

PDHPE Tutor Trinity Gardens, SA
Equip them with the tools they need to succeed. Most students do not achieve their full potential because they do not believe they have it in them. The most important thing a tutor can do is to help foster a love for learning and encourage a student to believe in themselves. If they believe in themselves, they can do anything. I am patient and…
Terry
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Terry

PDHPE Tutor Kent Town, SA
A tutor's main job is to help re-explaining new concepts and/or help students consolidate new concepts as well as integrating new ones as they are being taught. Therefore, the most important things that a tutor can do for a student is to explain new concepts in simple and relatable terms, encourage interests in a particular subject and most…
Maria
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Maria

PDHPE 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…
Samuel
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Samuel

PDHPE Tutor Para Vista, SA
I believe the most important thing which a tutor can do for a student is not only teach them what they need to know but teach them the skills which they need to succeed on their own. I believe this because although a tutor can help with their learning, they can't be there every single step of the way, especially after high school. These skills…
Noah
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Noah

PDHPE Tutor Belair, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to get them passionate/interested in what they are learning about, motivating them to learn and improve without getting bored. Another important aspect is to help them establish good study habits and a will to understand the concepts rather than just going through repetitive…

Local Reviews

We are really happy with Paul. He is doing a great job.
Jayne

Inside MaylandsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Pranavi covered timetables up to 12x and practised recognising basic equivalent fractions using denominators up to 5.

In Year 7, Milly worked on converting fractions to decimals and percentages as well as applying order of operations with division questions.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Harrison focused on solving quadratic equations by applying the null factor law and reviewed methods for factorising quadratics in preparation for upcoming assessments.

Recent Challenges

In Year 7–8 maths, several students relied heavily on written calculation for times tables (e.g., "she needs to work out the answer on paper" for 12 × 12), which slowed progress in fractions and long division.

A tutor noted, "she sometimes puts the 3 in the thousands column instead of hundreds," revealing how layout issues disrupted multi-digit subtraction.

In Year 10 algebra, one student could express answers verbally but struggled to write equations accurately—especially with negative coefficients and variables—often missing crucial signs.

In English, another student's tendency to omit quotation marks or misplace commas made dialogue unclear and marked down her writing.

Recent Achievements

One Maylands tutor noticed Milly, a high school student, now self-corrects her mistakes in algebraic expressions—she highlights like terms and revises her answers without prompting, which was a big shift from needing step-by-step help.

In another session, Harrison demonstrated greater independence in trigonometry by recalling the correct ratios and showing his full working when solving for unknown sides, something he'd hesitated to do previously.

Meanwhile, with younger students, Naba moved from tracing numbers with guidance to writing several digits unaided (2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9) during maths activities.

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 St Peters Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Trinity Gardens School.