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Wyoming's tutors include a university lecturer and resident high school maths coach, medical students with mentoring experience and ATARs up to 98.15, peer leaders from Gosford Selective and St George Girls, a university medallist in science, award-winning creative writers, experienced dance teachers, and primary educators skilled at supporting diverse learners.

Andrew
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Andrew

Physics Tutor Wyoming, NSW
While it is important that students are achieving the marks they want, this is only half of the game. As a physics tutor, I want to be able to maximise their performance but also teach them the fundamental skills that come along with achieving success. Things like consistency, discipline and a growth mindset aren’t part of any NSW syllabus, but…
Annie
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Annie

Physics Tutor North Gosford, NSW
Empowering students to learn and build efficiency learning habits that are sustainable. I can relate to students as I have also been in their position before. Knowing what it feels like to be in a learning process I can be patient when teaching content. I enjoy learning as I am teaching as well so I can work through things with my…
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Miro Jan Benedict
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Miro Jan Benedict

Physics Tutor Gosford, NSW
The most important thing a physics tutor can do for a student is giving them confidence that they can learn. This will give them confidence to try and be creative in finding ways to understand any complex topic they need to know. One of my strengths as a tutor is that I am creative in discussing complex topics. I can discuss the same topic in…
Ella
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Ella

Physics Tutor Springfield, NSW
Not just assist with the knowledge of the content but also the meta-cognition and understanding their own learning styles. I think I am a very empathetic person and I am able to understand different student's learning needs and learning…
Harley
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Harley

Physics Tutor Gosford, NSW
Help them enjoy learning. The role of a physics tutor should be to engage the student and make the learning process fun, encouraging them to put more effort into their learning, consequently improving their results. As well as this, it is vital that a tutor guide the student to a solution rather than simply giving them the answer, allowing them to…
Advaith
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Advaith

Physics Tutor Ourimbah, NSW
A tutor in my perspective must be flexible and must be willing to offer any form of support, I.e. helping solve problems, explain concepts in detail, clear misconceptions, etc. Also it is important always maintains a positive attitude and encourages students to learn more. I also think a physics tutor should be able to provide their students with…
Harrison
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Harrison

Physics Tutor Yattalunga, NSW
I think the most important thing a physics tutor can do for a student is to make them feel proud and confident with themselves as well as being a supportive teacher. I know from experience that when you're struggling with a concept it is a very disheartening thing and can lead to self doubt and giving up. I think a tutor should help a student work…
SAMUEL
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SAMUEL

Physics Tutor Terrigal, NSW
Treat them with patience, respect, and help them to understand the content Breaking down complicated…
Caitlin
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Caitlin

Physics Tutor Terrigal, NSW
A tutor's most important role, in my opinion, is using their passion for a subject to provide the student with confidence in the subject, and even inspiring this same passion in the student if it is not already there. I have 5+ years of teaching experience as a martial arts instructor, I am passionate about and skilled at the subjects I would like…
Oliver
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Oliver

Physics Tutor North Avoca, NSW
Ultimately, there are two things. Teaching a student to be curious, and teaching a student how to learn. Education systems are designed to filter all kids through a rigid, structured system, which, although brilliant for most, loses the spirit of why we learn. Because we are curious! We like to see how things work, to investigate our world and…

Local Reviews

Lidya is terrific. She's just what Chloe needs.
Simone

Inside WyomingTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Chloe worked through formulae and equations, focusing on speed, distance, and time questions from her upcoming test, as well as calculating averages and converting percentages to decimals.

In Year 9, Rory tackled challenging past paper problems involving trigonometry (using SOHCAHTOA), compound interest calculations, and ratio word problems.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Liv practiced applying index laws—especially powers of fractions and the zero index law—while also working on multiplying and dividing indices.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student often left school materials at home, which limited revision and meant exam preparation was improvised—"he didn't have any guidelines for revision," noted a tutor.

In Year 12, another student required prompting to problem-solve independently in maths; without reminders, progress slowed on surface area questions.

A Year 7 learner repeatedly avoided showing working on paper, preferring mental calculations, leading to missed steps and confusion when checking answers.

Meanwhile, in Year 4 maths, untidy written columns caused simple addition errors that were hard to spot until reviewing together. These habits led to extra time spent fixing basics rather than moving forward.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Wyoming noticed a big shift for one Year 11 student who, after initially struggling with trig, spoke up to ask for help and then revisited the topic until he could explain each answer without prompting.

Another recent high school win: Liv, in Year 9, moved from relying on intuitive guesses with index laws to methodically working through powers of fractions—she now double-checks her steps instead of rushing.

In Year 4 maths, Rudy surprised his tutor by inventing his own mnemonic for long division and started checking his work by reversing the calculation before moving on.

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 Erina Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Wyoming Public School.