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Tutors in Swanbank include a Queensland-registered teacher with over a decade's K–12 classroom and relief experience, Senior Cambridge maths specialists, school academic captains and subject duxes, ATAR 99.45 and 94+ achievers, university education majors, seasoned private tutors, and award-winning educators recognized for both teaching excellence and competition success.

Annie
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Annie

Economics Tutor Augustine Heights, QLD
To be able to teach the concepts with patience and clarity. A good tutor would be able to inspire the students to develop an interest and enjoy learning Maths. I am able to teach Maths at all levels from grade 5 to grade 12. I can breakdown complicated concepts into simple terms, such as calculus, trigonometry and integration, etc. I am also…
Amariz
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Amariz

Economics Tutor Ebbw Vale, QLD
Establishing clear boundaries while being friendly and approachable; there is friendliness but understanding you are there to help them succeed. I draw a strong line that there is time for things, and the time spent with me is to learn and grow. Assisting students to see the value of education and inspiring a genuine appreciation for it are also…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Ma Cristina
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Ma Cristina

Economics Tutor Augustine Heights, QLD
Be creative and flexible with learning styles Every student has a unique learning style and a unique personality. To be effective, savvy tutors determine the best way to reach each student via their learning style (more visual, more verbal, more written down, etc.). Tutors can next make inroads by finding things that interest their students…
Sunil
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Sunil

Economics Tutor Augustine Heights, QLD
Empower encourage and motivate Listening, Teaching skills, Understanding of multisensory teaching…
THOMAS
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THOMAS

Economics Tutor Raceview, QLD
Make learning interesting for the student. Establish a systematic approach to help the student learn Help students to learn at their level. Be compassionate. Being a Teacher and Tutor I am able to quickly establish rapport with…
Adam
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Adam

Economics Tutor Collingwood Park, QLD
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to instil a level of confidence. Confidence that comes the succesful understanding of mathematic concepts not only makes current studying more rewarding but aids in future development. Particularly in mathematics were new concepts are constantly introduced, such confidence allows…
Roselyne
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Roselyne

Economics Tutor East Ipswich, QLD
I think the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to ensure that the student does not need the tutor anymore. I am very patient person and I think this is a plus when it comes to tutoring my…
Madison
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Madison

Economics Tutor One Mile, QLD
The most important things an economics tutor can do for a student is to increase understanding of the subject and inspire their interest to further pursue their studies in their own time. My greatest strength as is tutor my patience. I understand that every student has different strengths and some will require more time than others to reach their…
Paul
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Paul

Economics Tutor Coalfalls, QLD
To teach them to think intensively and critically so that they can learn independently in the future. In year 11 I was tutored in mathematics and so I understand the difficulty in learning new and unfamiliar topics. That experience will allow me to relate to the person I am tutoring, which will create a better learning experience for the…
Ari
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Ari

Economics Tutor Springfield, QLD
To be honest, Improving grades is important, but for me, the change in the attitude of students interested in studying and finding themselves was more rewarding and it is the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student. My first strength as a tutor is integrity. A teacher who teaches a student simply for the purpose of spending…

Local Reviews

My daughter has gained more confidence in her maths since we have had Shiqi & has understood concepts in maths where she was struggling before. Shiqi explains things in a more simpler way and has patience,
Elicia Hoang

Inside SwanbankTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Arya focused on matrix multiplication with step-by-step exercises and practiced general maths equations from Unit 4.

A Year 11 student, Summer, worked through CU questions in her maths book, tackling BODMAS problems—especially the importance of brackets—and explored spatial patterns.

Meanwhile, a Year 7 session with Grace covered understanding rates and gradients using practical examples and introduced straight line graphs for real-world applications.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 maths, over-reliance on the tutor for confirmation—"she still sometimes relies on me to tell her if the outcome is right or wrong"—meant hesitancy in checking answers independently during algebra practice.

A Year 7 student's messy handwriting and inconsistent layout in ratio questions led to lost marks as working became hard to follow.

In Year 11, forgetting specific formulas for probability and bivariate data caused repeated stumbles despite prior revision attempts.

For a Year 4 learner, skipping steps when using column addition made it difficult to spot errors; this left them unsure where they went wrong after finishing problems.

Recent Achievements

One Swanbank tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to rely on step-by-step guidance now working through equations independently with just brief prompts, even tackling gradients independently by the end of their session.

In Year 9 English, another student has started "talking aloud" and using pen-and-paper strategies while answering questions—a real shift from silent guessing.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner who previously skipped over tough words is now reading new chapters out loud and identifying punctuation errors as she goes, catching things she'd missed before. Last week, she finished her story with only two reminders to check for capitals.

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 Redbank Plains Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Ann's School.