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Private pdhpe tutors that come to you in person or online

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Ransome's tutors include a seasoned private tutor and UQ Academic Excellence Scholar (OP1, QCAA Certificate winner), an Honours physics student with a 99.1 ATAR, experienced K–12 English/maths specialists, IB and academic competition achievers, school leaders, STEM ambassadors, and rhythmic gymnastics national champions with years of coaching and peer mentoring expertise.

Brayden
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Brayden

PDHPE Tutor Gumdale, QLD
Provide another explanation of how to perform, solve and learn things. Another voice providing another angle of knowledge. Building a meaningful relationship with the student to be trusted that the knowledge shared is trustworthy. Communication - I’ve often felt that I am able to effectively and efficiently get across my point and am able to…
Vedant
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Vedant

PDHPE Tutor Mansfield, QLD
A tutor can give his time for the student and make him understand until he understands it completely Important thing would be tutor can make him study until he/she has aced that topic Make the student understand the topic/concept if they are unsure of anything Another strength would be that whoever has tutored from me, has always passed his/her…
1st Lesson Trial

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Murray
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Murray

PDHPE Tutor Manly, QLD
By the very nature of the experience being very personal and focused, the teaching provides a level of rapport and understanding of both the student's strengths and weaknesses creating an environment for more accelerated learning. The most important thing the tutor can do is to understand the individuals needs more holistically to provide the best…
Harmony
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Harmony

PDHPE Tutor Capalaba, QLD
I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student go beyond just explaining the content. First, a tutor should make the student feel comfortable asking questions — even the ones they think are “silly.†When a student feels safe to speak up, real learning starts. Second, it’s important to focus on understanding, not…
Armaan
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Armaan

PDHPE Tutor Mansfield, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are providing guidance, motivation, and support. Tutors should create a positive and encouraging learning environment, helping students build confidence in their abilities. They should also instill good study habits and problem-solving skills. Additionally, it's crucial to foster a passion for…
Amber
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Amber

PDHPE Tutor Mansfield, QLD
One of the most important things that a tutor can do for their students is to build strong and personal relationships with their students. The more connected a student feels to their tutor, the more trustworthy and respectful the environment becomes – an essential aspect for students to learn well and progress academically. When a tutor listens…

Local Reviews

Corey is keen to have Vinny help him and they both are getting on really well. Vinny is patient & is taking Corey step by step through his assignment.
Beth, Wakerley

Inside RansomeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Lucas focused on writing multiplication sentences for equal groups and multiplying using number lines to deepen understanding of times tables.

In Year 9, Sarah worked through quadratic equations, practising how to factorise and solve them step-by-step.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Aiden explored exponential functions and their graphs, learning to interpret key features like intercepts and growth rates using graphing exercises.

Recent Challenges

In Year 3 mathematics, skipping steps and writing answers too quickly sometimes led to avoidable mistakes—"Lucas sometimes draws an extra circle or misses one because he is really fast." This meant time was spent fixing small errors instead of moving on to new ideas.

In English for the same year, confusion between similar-looking letters (such as 'a' and 'b') made spelling practice more challenging.

A Year 6 student working with data struggled to consistently use the correct brackets in formulas, which changed results unexpectedly.

Moments like these showed how layout and careful checking directly affected confidence and accuracy during lessons.

Recent Achievements

One Ransome tutor noticed real change with a Year 11 student, Ruby, who now confidently applies the seasonal index formula and tackles real-world trend problems—something she was hesitant to attempt without guidance just weeks ago.

In Year 9, Isaac moved from struggling with exponential graphs to predicting their behavior independently in sessions.

Meanwhile, Cooper (Year 3) used to wait for prompts before reading tricky words aloud but now volunteers to try them out and can accurately use new vocabulary in sentences. Last week he even read a whole page without stopping for help.

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 Capalaba Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Moreton Bay Boys' College.