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Sampson Flat's tutors include a PhD mathematician, Mensa member, and former university professor; veteran school teachers with master's degrees and classroom leadership roles; rising university scholars in maths, science, and education; experienced youth mentors, OSHC educators, creative writers, camp leaders—and subject award winners in everything from Olympiad maths to music and the arts.

Sebastian
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Sebastian

PDHPE Tutor Greenwith, SA
One of the most crucial things a tutor can do for a student is communicate with them so they comprehend the material. I see a lot of teachers that know a great deal about a subject but don't know how to express it effectively enough for everyone to understand. As a tutor, I feel that the most essential thing is to ensure that the students…
Isaac
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Isaac

PDHPE Tutor Surrey Downs, SA
The most valuable thing a tutor can do is show children that learning can be easy, enjoyable, and rewarding. Tutors are positive role models to students and can be academic mentors to them which has great influence to their entire wellbeing. My greatest strength as a tutor is being able to explain content in a variety of ways. If a child doesn’t…
1st Lesson Trial

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We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Lachlan
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Lachlan

PDHPE Tutor Surrey Downs, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do is be engaging and enthusiastic about what they are teaching. Being patient and open-minded to different teach methods is important as every student is different, what might work for one student, won't work for another. Constant encouragement and positivity as well will create the best learning environment…
Nicole
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Nicole

PDHPE Tutor Salisbury Heights, SA
The most important thing is give a student confidence in their own abilities. Without confidence, a student will continue to doubt themselves and struggle whether you are guiding them in their learning or not. I am compassionate, good at explaining things in multiple ways, and creative. I believe that to be a tutor you have to be creative, as the…
Samuel
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Samuel

PDHPE Tutor Salisbury Heights, 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…

Local Reviews

Our daughter seems to respond well to Adam and even though it's still early days she is much more confident!
Michelle

Inside Sampson FlatTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Dominic worked on understanding integers and numeric expressions, then practiced addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of fractions—including converting between mixed numbers and improper fractions.

Year 10 student Abigail focused on factoring quadratic expressions in various formats to clarify confusion, and also explored early statistics concepts such as measures of central tendency for a school investigation.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Laura reviewed differentiation rules for derivatives and discussed antiderivatives as part of introductory calculus preparation.

Recent Challenges

No significant process or learning habit issues were observed across the range of year levels and subjects in recent lesson notes.

For example, a Year 12 student maintained consistent motivation while clarifying new mathematics concepts, with a tutor remarking, "he is putting much effort into understanding, clarifying and applying concepts."

In lower secondary, one student's careful questioning around fractions led to visible improvement and growing confidence.

Even when misunderstandings arose in graphing tasks for middle years, students engaged actively to resolve them during sessions.

No concerns regarding organization, written work presentation, homework completion, or reliance on aids appeared in these lessons.

Recent Achievements

One Sampson Flat tutor noticed Abigail, a senior student, has started recognising and applying probability rules independently—where she once needed hints, she now spots patterns on her own.

In Year 10 maths, Dominic is showing a shift from quiet participation to actively requesting extra practice problems during sessions and even asks for new challenges at the end of lessons.

Meanwhile, Laura in Year 6 used to hesitate when concepts were unclear but recently began voicing specific questions about statistics so they could be worked through together; last week she asked for clarification until she felt sure enough to tackle the next exercise solo.

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 Playford Civic Centre Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like One Tree Hill Primary School.