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Tutors in Banyo include a Master-qualified primary educator with over a decade's classroom and leadership experience, high-ATAR graduates (up to 98.35) with subject prizes in Physics and Mathematics, Olympiad and ICAS awardees, seasoned peer mentors, and specialists in programming and science—plus teachers with years of K–12 maths, coding, and education support expertise.

Anu
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Anu

Economics Tutor Boondall, QLD
Need to be keep patience and help them whenever they needed I have good command on subjects . I help to build confidence. and teach them the concepts and skills…
Tarquin
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Tarquin

Economics Tutor Aspley, QLD
Able to understand where, mentally, a student is at so that targeted and effective feedback, advice, and explanations can be given. I am extremely fluent in English and believe I can eloquently explain and deconstruct concepts and problems for…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Sarah
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Sarah

Economics Tutor Chermside, QLD
Help them to achieve their academic goals. I am committed, flexible, consistent, organised and have the ability to…
Richard
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Richard

Economics Tutor Everton Park, QLD
Help them to improve their confidence in their subjects............................................................................................................................................................................................................................ Patience, humour, academic mind…
Peter
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Peter

Economics Tutor Mcdowall, QLD
A tutor should get a student to THINK! and not rush to find an answer! This means to get the students to be able to focus on the content at hand and to use various ways to remember the content and apply the content in different ways to solve problems in the real world. Life experience/work…
Roberto
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Roberto

Economics Tutor Newmarket, QLD
Relate. The student will understand the concept once it resonates with something the student is interested in. A tutor needs to describe the concept, demonstrate the concept and invite the student to attempt the concept. This open dialogue, dispelling fear of failure and welcoming the opportunity to learn is an important attribute an economics…
Jeremy
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Jeremy

Economics Tutor Kalinga, QLD
Allow the student to learn how to do the question but with prompts not showing the student everything. Communication, relationship…
Sophia
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Sophia

Economics Tutor Clayfield, QLD
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is make them feel as if they have tried their absolute hardest and have done their best. A student should feel confident and empowered going into their next exam or assessment as they have acquired a new understanding of the subject. I think I have the patience to take my time with…
Jeremy
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Jeremy

Economics Tutor Newmarket, QLD
A tutor must be patient and listen to how the student feels and explains their material. Without this we can't understand where the gaps are in the students knowledge OR whether they really do understand, but just in a different way. I have infinite patience, I can adjust my communication style, and I when faced with something unfamiliar I have…
Matthew
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Matthew

Economics Tutor Newmarket, QLD
I think a common misconception about an economics tutor's job is that their whole purpose is to get their tutee an A+. While this is obviously a wonderful side-effect of tutoring, the most important thing a tutor can do is to develop and improve a student's ability to problem-solve, learn, and work effectively to complete their academic goals. The…

Local Reviews

Shane is personable, punctual and knowledgeable. He is helping me improve in maths and is interesting, practical and straight-talking. I highly recommend him as a tutor.
Leilani Tuiano, Virginia

Inside BanyoTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Liam focused on simplifying algebraic expressions using index laws and worked through questions on surface area and volume of prisms.

Year 9 student Emily tackled trigonometry, applying sine and cosine rules to solve bearings problems by drawing diagrams for worded scenarios.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Ava completed a statistics task calculating mean, median, mode, and range from real datasets, along with classifying data types as nominal, ordinal, discrete or continuous.

Recent Challenges

Omitting units in measurement problems was a recurring issue for a Year 9 student, resulting in incomplete answers ("needs to remember to put units on answers of measurement questions").

In Year 10 trigonometry, another student relied heavily on the formula sheet but mixed up variables and missed key terms when substituting values, particularly with sine and cosine rules.

For a senior student working with simultaneous equations, there was initial confusion from not extracting all information from worded questions; diagramming steps were skipped or incomplete.

In Year 7, surface area tasks became overwhelming without stepwise breakdowns, leading to forgotten steps and errors in calculation sequence.

Recent Achievements

One Banyo tutor noticed a Year 9 student who used to freeze when faced with simultaneous equations now confidently works through each step and even explains the process back before tackling new problems alone.

In a recent high school session, a Year 11 student who often guessed on trigonometry questions instead paused to draw accurate diagrams and identified the correct rule without prompting.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student showed initiative by checking her own graphing answers after plotting coordinates—something she previously avoided unless asked—before moving on to fill out another table independently.

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 Banyo Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Pius' Primary School.