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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Norman Park's tutors include a PhD mathematician from Cambridge, experienced school teachers and relief teachers with international credentials, primary specialists with postgraduate training, accomplished English and maths mentors, an award-winning science graduate, and seasoned private tutors—many bringing years of K–12 classroom expertise, academic excellence, and proven dedication to student growth.

Marcelina
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Marcelina

PDHPE Tutor Kangaroo Point, QLD
There are a lot of qualities that go into being a good tutor. I believe some of the most important skills for the field is patience and communication. As I am working with students and their respective area of difficulty in learning, it is important and a priority for myself to approach any circumstances with patience at all times. This is an…
Sienna
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Sienna

PDHPE Tutor Highgate Hill, QLD
Build up their confidence and belief in themselves Patience,…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in PDHPE

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Hermes
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Hermes

PDHPE Tutor South Brisbane, QLD
I think communication is one of the most important aspects as a tutor which we could change their of how they solve the problems or questions with a simple communication I’m really talkative and outgoing so I think I could get involved with the students…
Anna
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Anna

PDHPE Tutor Toowong, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do are to listen to their students and respond accordingly when tutoring them. It is also important to encourage their abilities and help them to succeed. A tutor should also be there to encourage continuous learning and creating a positive learning environment. I believe my strengths as a tutor are working…
Imogen
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Imogen

PDHPE Tutor Gordon Park, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student, beyond imparting knowledge, is creating a positive environment which allows students to grow in confidence and develop critical thinking skills to become independent learners. I believe my strengths as a tutor are maintaining a positive and motivating attitude with students at all times, as…
Benjamin
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Benjamin

PDHPE Tutor Woolloongabba, QLD
Improve their self esteem by helping them do better at school. I think the student being tutored is the most important person, so you want to help them and improve their skills as much as possible. Strengths are listening, honesty, cheerfulness, calmness, communication Weaknesses: I'm probably a bit on the softer side, a bit too…
Sean
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Sean

PDHPE Tutor Fortitude Valley, QLD
Encouraging the use of potential, and subtly promoting the values of the pursuit of academic achievement. Strong rapport building skills, Patient, Encouraging, Light hearted, Great empathising skills, Understand means of learning strategies and memory function, Knowing to reward progress. As for weaknesses, I'm not too sure since I've lived most…
Harrison
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Harrison

PDHPE Tutor Kelvin Grove, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is relate to their learning. A great tutor will adapt their learning styles and pedagogy to frame the student and enable them to learn in the best way possible. For example, you may have several students across the week, yet all of them are different. A great tutor makes an effort in…
Harry
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Harry

PDHPE Tutor Mount Gravatt, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is teach them in the way the they best understand. This makes the fundamental process of learning easier from square one creating more time to learn to solve more difficult problems. My strength main strength ass a tutor is helping students break down and understand what the question is…
Jamie-Leigh
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Jamie-Leigh

PDHPE Tutor Auchenflower, QLD
Understand where they having trouble. People understand certain concepts quicker than others and sometimes the easy things can be complicated but a misunderstanding. I haven't looked at high school math in a long time. But nothing a bit of refreshing can't…

Local Reviews

Katie has been absolutely amazing to my daughter. Even just on the first trial session my daughter felt she has learned a lot from Katie. My daughter has been stressing out with her Chemistry assessment but with Katie's help she was able to submit it on time and hopefully she will get a high mark for it.
Gianna, Coorparoo

Inside Norman ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Yuvaan worked on probability using Venn diagrams and also practised finding the perimeter of sectors and calculating the volume of cylinders.

Year 10 student Emma focused on graphing logarithmic functions and solving optimisation questions by applying first and second derivatives to real-world scenarios.

For Year 11, Lucas revised probability density functions alongside quartile ranges, tackling practice problems from recent exam papers to strengthen his understanding.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student often became overwhelmed by complex calculus questions, "getting lost in formulas" and feeling stress when breaking down chain or substitution rules.

In Year 8, another struggled to recall key steps for algebraic simplification—sometimes forgetting methods mid-task, which led to confusion as problems grew harder.

For a younger primary student, difficulty focusing on one activity at a time showed up during numeracy: he wanted to switch back to writing letters instead of counting, and sometimes mixed up numbers like 15 and 51.

These patterns left gaps in understanding and made exam conditions more challenging.

Recent Achievements

A Norman Park tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student's approach: after struggling to identify errors in their statistics work, they now catch mistakes on their own and use the correct method without prompting.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with integration rules can now quickly simplify expressions and spot derivatives of simple equations much faster than before.

On the primary side, one Year 1 learner—who was previously unsure about blending sounds—now independently blends and decodes new words during reading activities and counts up to fifty without hesitation.

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 New Farm Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Thomas' School.