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Seacombe Heights' tutors include a 15-year K–12 teaching and coordination veteran with multiple education degrees, a Master's-level mathematician, an English teacher with university lecturing experience, seasoned private science and maths tutors, peer mentors for high schoolers, academic scholarship recipients, and accomplished STEM undergraduates passionate about guiding students of all ages.

Harrison
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Harrison

PDHPE Tutor Reynella East, SA
The tutor must be supportive of their work and problems as well where students can feel comfortable around you in expressing their opinions and with their own work. A tutor must be engaging from the moment they first meet the student, to how they deliver the tutoring, to the last second that they leave each tutoring session. A tutor must also be…
Bianca
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Bianca

PDHPE Tutor Colonel Light Gardens, SA
Make the student feel safe is number one and to inspire a love for learning is the goal! Ensuring that the tutor presents them self in a way where the child is comfortable in your presence so they can learn and ask question is vital also. Knowing the child’s individual learning preferences and catering to this makes a huge difference also in the…
1st Lesson Trial

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Payal
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Payal

PDHPE Tutor Ascot Park, SA
- Personalise their learning to enhance the knowledge - Minimise the weaknesses a person have & frequently communicate things - Patience - Communication - and lastly Honest & open relationship with the…
Lily
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Lily

PDHPE Tutor Morphettville, SA
I believe that a tutor should guide their students to do their best and learn. A tutor should be good at communicating and explaining things in ways that the student understands. I am a hardworking and organised person and i always give everything my all. I am a perfectionist and worked hard in year 12 to receive a high ATAR. i am approachable and…
Miranda
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Miranda

PDHPE Tutor Glenelg, SA
Identifying the student's strengths and weaknesses is crucial. I would ensure their strengths are reflected through their work and that we are spending extra time focusing on the weaker areas. As a tutor, you act as the student's moral support, as the subjects they are receiving tutoring for are the subjects they find the most challenging. You are…
Noah
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Noah

PDHPE Tutor Lynton, 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…
Maria
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Maria

PDHPE Tutor Forestville, 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…

Local Reviews

Hazel is so enjoying her tutor, she is completely comfortable and looks forward to her visit every week. She is learning and becoming more confident in the school classroom.
Kerrie, Seaview Downs

Inside Seacombe HeightsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Thomas worked through applying first and second derivatives to graph analysis and interpreting turning points, using chain, product, and quotient rules in differentiation.

For Year 11, Emily focused on physics concepts such as momentum vectors and conservation of momentum, practicing calculations with real-life scenarios.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Michael revised exponential and logarithmic differentiation techniques and practiced extended calculus applications involving intervals of increase or decrease for advanced functions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student often forgot to bring a calculator, making it hard to keep up during lessons and slowing down progress on algebra problems.

In senior maths, one student "relied heavily on formula sheets," which meant he struggled to solve new application questions without prompts.

A Year 10's messy written work in trigonometric differentiation made errors harder to spot; as noted, "he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors."

Meanwhile, a primary student lost focus during subtraction practice, drifting off-task when tasks felt repetitive or too easy—leading to gaps that later reappeared in test revision.

Recent Achievements

One Seacombe Heights tutor noticed Thomas, a Year 12 student, making a real shift in his approach to calculus—he now checks back over his work for errors and confidently applies the chain, product, and quotient rules without prompts, a big step from needing reminders just weeks ago.

In Year 10, Stephen has started tackling longer percentage word problems on his own after initially freezing up when faced with multi-step questions; now he recognises what to do even with trickier contexts.

Meanwhile, Fred in Year 3 completed his homework independently for the first time, only asking for help when genuinely stuck.

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 Cultural Centre Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Seaview High School.