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Private english tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit Guarantee
100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Waterloo Corner's tutors include a Master of Teaching candidate and former school Dux, an experienced high school science teacher with eight years' classroom expertise, a 99.90 ATAR achiever and multi-year Dux, private maths and English specialists with postgraduate degrees, award-winning peer mentors, netball coaches, and accomplished academic competition participants in both maths and science.

Izuchukwu
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Izuchukwu

English Tutor Green Fields, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to be a good example and a sourceof great inspiration. The ability to inspire students to tackle challenges in their learning process The ability to persevere in problem solving Humility in tutoring, placing myself down to a level where you can see from your students point of…
Daneet
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Daneet

English Tutor Green Fields, SA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is really listen and understand how a student learns. It’s about explaining things in a way that actually clicks, not just repeating the textbook.A tutor should cheer them on and celebrate even the small wins. Being patient is key, because everyone learns at their own pace. Most importantly, a…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in English

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Nithin
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Nithin

English Tutor Elizabeth Park, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide clear explanations, offer patient guidance, foster a supportive learning environment, adapt teaching strategies to suit the student's needs, and instill confidence in their abilities. As a tutor, I believe my strengths lie in my ability to explain complex concepts in simple…
Madilyn
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Madilyn

English Tutor Salisbury Park, SA
Be patient with them and teach them in the way that they need. Listening to peoples needs and giving them help that they…
Stacey
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Stacey

English Tutor Smithfield, SA
Help them understand the material, encourage their strengths and support them when they find something difficult I believe I'm good at helping people understand information, being able to explain things simply and…

Local Reviews

My son Adam is very comfortable working with Tom. They are still a work in progress as they have only had a couple of sessions. Adams first assignment with Tom, We had an excellent result. Adam is a high functioning Autistic he struggles with comprehension & Tom gets it. 5 Stars
Nahida

Inside Waterloo CornerTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Amelia worked through perimeter and area of kites and irregular shapes, and also practised graphing on cartesian planes with X,Y tables.

In Year 8, Suhana focused on partitioning numbers as well as building confidence with basic multiplication, division, and simple fractions using visual models.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Archie tackled converting between fractions, decimals, and percentages, plus applied these skills to financial maths topics such as calculating price reductions and profit/loss scenarios.

Recent Challenges

A Year 2 student frequently avoided writing numbers independently, often needing repeated tracing practice and close guidance.

As one tutor observed, "he would imitate what was said rather than attempt sounding out words on his own," showing a reluctance to risk mistakes during English phonics work.

In Year 8 maths, another student hesitated to talk through problem-solving steps aloud, which limited her ability to break down multi-step word problems—she tended to say "I don't know" quickly instead of unpacking the question.

In Year 10, confidence wavered after errors in Pythagoras' theorem; she left working blank when unsure, slowing progress through test review.

Recent Achievements

One Waterloo Corner tutor noticed a high school student now checks her working without reminders, catching and fixing her own mistakes in Pythagoras' theorem questions—something she rarely did before.

Another older student, who used to hesitate when starting problems, now talks through her reasoning aloud and can spot where she's gone off track, only occasionally needing help.

Meanwhile, a primary student who previously rushed maths problems has begun slowing down to double-check answers and uses number-lines more independently to solve addition with negative numbers. In last week's session, she completed all textbook exercises on her own initiative before asking for extra practice.

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 Burton Community Hub Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Burton Primary School.