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Tutors in Peppermint Grove include a WA Maths Olympiad top 0.3% ATAR scorer with extensive K–12 mentoring, a Master of Teaching-qualified primary specialist and school Dux, seasoned private tutors with scholarship success stories, peer leaders from Perth Modern and PLC's Gifted program, Teach Learn Grow mentors, debate adjudicators, and international academic prizewinners across STEM, languages and the arts.

Tessa
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Tessa

Psychology Tutor Nedlands, WA
Being patient with a student has to be the most important. Learning isn’t the same for everyone and some areas of learning are harder for some people. Remaining patient and staying kind while a child is learning is extremely important. I am a patient person, who can think creatively and how to teach subjects in different ways to suit different…
Karen
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Karen

Psychology Tutor Herdsman, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is motivate them and help them realise that they can succeed and help them to really understand the subject and be able to use this understanding to achieve good grades. I think my strengths are being patient and understanding and the ability to tailor explanations to specific students and work…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Psychology

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Matthew
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Matthew

Psychology Tutor Wembley Downs, WA
The important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel more confident about their abilities and knowledge. The more they can back them-self, the more they can be composed in a test environment, the better they perform in test conditions, the better their marks. Like a positive feedback loop, this will also increase confidence;better…
Shannon
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Shannon

Psychology Tutor Nedlands, WA
I believe that it is important for a tutor to provide constructive but fair feedback to their students, while also providing practical advice and support to them, so they can improve in areas where they were originally struggling. I believe that I am a patient and understanding person, who is quite personable and can talk to people easily. I have…
Elizabeth
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Elizabeth

Psychology Tutor Melville, WA
Help the student to fulfill their potential and build their self-esteem in school Being succinct, organised and knowledgable about the material. I am also patient and…
Aliah
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Aliah

Psychology Tutor Hilton, WA
I think the most important is to follow the students lead. They will often know their weaknesses and from spending time working with them, you can take note of possible areas of improvement. However, at the end of the day you are there to help the student so by listening and communicating effectively both parties will be satisfied. The ability to…
Katherine
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Katherine

Psychology Tutor Perth, WA
Listen and teach. I think it is so important for students to be listened to and helped accordingly. They must be given the space to work through problems they are facing themselves so that they can believe in their own abilities and increase their own self-efficacy. It is vital that the student can not only regurgitate an answer or process but…
Jack
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Jack

Psychology Tutor Como, WA
Being in tune with their academic functioning level and helping them to reach their potential. Being a mentor in life and in studies. Being able to facilitate a fun learning environment for them to develop an interest in academics. I am patient, approachable and engaging. I have had several years of private tutoring experience. I enjoy working…
Anthony
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Anthony

Psychology Tutor Northbridge, WA
I believe that instilling self-belief and critical thinking is the most important things a tutor can do for their student. Reflecting on my year 12 as got a score that I felt wasn't enough for medicine (96.00 ATAR), I have learnt to become someone who is collaborative and believes in a growth mindset after my a failure. in Year 12. I believe…

Local Reviews

Carla has been very receptive and knowledgeable. We particularly like that she comes with materials ready to teach based on the feedback we give her.
Cris, Dalkeith

Inside Peppermint GroveTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Ella focused on converting between fractions, decimals, and percentages, then practiced applying these conversions in simple word problems.

Year 8 student Daniel worked through solving linear equations with pronumerals—including those with fractions—and expanded brackets while reviewing how to combine like terms.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Sophie revised circle theorems by working on proofs and terminology before practicing setting out formal solutions for tangent-related questions.

Recent Challenges

Several process-related habits impacted learning this term across multiple year levels.

In Year 9, a student regularly tried to solve equations in her head instead of showing all working, which led to "a lot of careless mistakes along the way" and made it harder for her to spot errors under test conditions.

For a Year 11 student, homework was sometimes incomplete or forgotten entirely—one lesson note simply read, "Did not complete homework," meaning new concepts like polynomial division had to be retaught from scratch rather than extended.

Messy working and unclear graph sketches in senior years also caused confusion during revision and assessment.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Peppermint Grove recently saw a Year 9 student start attempting all their algebra questions independently before asking for help, a big shift from earlier sessions where they'd wait for guidance.

In Year 11, one student who used to rush through homework began checking her answers and caught several careless mistakes on her own.

Another win came from a Year 7 session: after struggling with short division at first, the student now completes these problems confidently and sets out their working much more clearly than before, even finishing an entire worksheet without needing reminders.

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 Claremont Community Hub & Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Presbyterian Ladies' College.