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Cranbourne North's tutors include a third-year Bachelor of Education student with multiple primary school placements, a Monash mentor and 97+ ATAR Dux, experienced K–12 maths and science tutors awarded in Olympiads and competitions, Kumon-trained assistants, child psychology specialists, peer leaders, and academic high-achievers with extensive mentoring, coaching, and creative teaching backgrounds.

Abeer
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Abeer

Economics Tutor Beaconsfield, VIC
Help the student feel comfortable to ask and express themselves. Involve them and their own experience in the topic being taught. Make sure they enjoy the class and feel excited to learn. Patience. communication skills and understanding students. Ability to simplify things and making education fun. Use examples that related to the student…
Darius
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Darius

Economics Tutor Beaconsfield, VIC
The most important thing that a tutor can do for a student is encourage the student. Encouragement would make the student optimistic making him/her believe that his/her goal is achievable. Personally, I feel my strengths as a tutor are persistence, dedication and hard work. I am also an easy to approach individual which is helpful as the child is…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Sourav
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Sourav

Economics Tutor Beaconsfield, VIC
Be friendly with the students so that there will be a good bond between the tutor and student which would make the tutoring more efficient. Good Communication Skills Patience Empathy Friendly Subject Knowledge Engaging and…
Andy
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Andy

Economics Tutor Beaconsfield, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to build confidence. When students believe in their abilities, they’re more willing to engage with the material, take risks, and ask questions. Confidence can transform a student’s approach to learning, making them more resilient in the face of challenges. By providing support,…
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Doonya

Economics Tutor Beaconsfield, VIC
One of the most important things that a tutor can do for a student is to provide feedback. I am a firm believer in learning from your mistakes and often I find that students are provided with extensive amounts of work, however their feedback is often passed onto them rather than discussed with them. I think it is just as important to explain to…
Wathsala Subhashini Karunarathne
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Wathsala Subhashini Karunarathne

Economics Tutor Eumemmerring, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do are to create a supportive and comfortable learning environment, build the student’s confidence, and encourage independent thinking. A good tutor doesn’t just teach — they inspire curiosity and help students believe in their abilities. My strengths are patience, clear communication, and the ability to…

Local Reviews

Evangeline was great with my girls, we will keep her as thier tutor.
Christina, Cranbourne North

Inside Cranbourne NorthTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Alex focused on measurement and area, working through complex problems involving formula selection and application, and was introduced to basic trigonometric ratios (sin/cos/tan) in context.

Year 9 student Sam tackled scientific notation word problems and explored properties of similar triangles, including how to classify and display both numerical and categorical data.

Meanwhile, Year 6 student Amani reviewed addition and subtraction of fractions with related denominators and practised finding simple fractions of a quantity, ensuring understanding by converting between fractions, decimals, and percentages.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 Maths, one student often left school homework unfinished before lessons, limiting review time for challenging algebra and geometry tasks; "Finish school homework before session so can review."

Another Year 11 student in English required frequent reassurance to move from planning to writing independently, waiting for prompts instead of drafting paragraphs under timed conditions.

For a primary learner, focus faded as sessions progressed—especially during multiplication drills—leading to incomplete work and missed practice opportunities. In these moments, key skills weren't consolidated, and confidence dipped when facing unfamiliar or multi-step problems.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Cranbourne North recently noticed Harvey, a high school student, moving from just identifying language techniques to editing his own writing for clarity and structure—he now rewrites paragraphs without being prompted.

Another high schooler, Keerat, who used to hesitate with composite functions and boxplots, independently labelled all elements of a boxplot and accurately calculated quartiles during their session.

Meanwhile, Amani in Year 4 showed a big shift by voluntarily redoing her incorrect homework questions rather than skipping them as before; she completed every question on fractions correctly this time around.

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 Cranbourne Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Rangebank Primary School.