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Tutors in Advancetown include a Master of Teaching candidate and university mathematics tutor, an experienced primary and secondary school teacher with international credentials, peer mentors from top academic programs (ATAR 98.5–99+, IB 40+), award-winning STEM competitors, seasoned private tutors, and accomplished young leaders with specialist maths, science, and creative teaching backgrounds.

Bryan
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Bryan

Economics Tutor Carrara, QLD
Soft skills, not only things you learn from a book, being an economics tutor is more than being a teacher, is being also a mentor. Empathy, my upbringing, my skill…
Gurmanjot
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Gurmanjot

Economics Tutor Pacific Pines, QLD
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for their student is to increase their confidence levels. This is because a student should be confident about a subject or topic they struggled with after the tutor has helped them through it so that the student themselves are able to replicate the process and adapt to similar questions without…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Andrew
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Andrew

Economics Tutor Worongary, QLD
To have the ability to listen and shape content to needs of the audience, patience, empathy and ability to understand the difficulties others feel. Being able to create optimal learnings by shaping content/delivery facilitation to meet the needs of mentees/listeners. I believe that I have good time management skills by structuring lesson…
Lawrence
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Lawrence

Economics Tutor Mudgeeraba, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to provide support, encouragement and a positive learning environment. I find that tutoring is most effective, when the pupil willing to learn, and the best way to do that is by making maths engaging rather than frustrating. My strengths as a tutor would be my patience and my creativeness. I…
Audrey
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Audrey

Economics Tutor Mudgeeraba, QLD
I believe that one of the most important things a tutor can do for a student is adapt and personalise the way they teach and explain things to suit the individual needs of a student, whilst maintaining high levels of patience and understanding. I believe that my strengths as a tutor include my ability to offer multiple ways/processes of figuring…

Local Reviews

Natalie is absolutely fantastic! I cannot express how good she is with our son! She is so proficient at her job. He has had a sense of achievement after each lesson with her.
Elsbeth

Inside AdvancetownTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student India focused on multiplication tables up to six and practiced reading analogue clocks, as well as using money and giving change with hands-on activities.

In Year 10, Jade worked through algebraic expressions and equations, including applications of Pythagoras' theorem by reviewing exam questions together.

Year 11 student Lisa concentrated on Biology assignments covering biodiversity concepts such as Simpson's Diversity Index calculations and also explored genetics using Punnett squares to predict genotypes and phenotypes.

Recent Challenges

In Year 12 Biology, clarification was needed on referencing and applying scientific terminology; as one tutor noted, "Lisa needed to confirm a few things with her teacher for future questions," which slowed progress during exam revision.

A Year 9 Maths student struggled with formatting and graphing data accurately—adjustments were made in-lesson but inconsistent layouts led to confusion when reviewing statistics problems later.

In Year 6, reliance on counting from the start rather than building from known multiplication facts meant extra time spent on basic calculations instead of moving ahead.

During primary maths (Year 4), incomplete written working in division tasks made it harder to spot calculation errors.

Recent Achievements

One Advancetown tutor recently noticed Lisa, a Year 11 student, shifting from hesitating over DNA replication to independently investigating answers she wasn't sure about—she now checks her own understanding before asking for help.

In Year 10 maths, Zahlia used to get stuck and wait when unsure, but after focusing on just writing down an answer and improving it later, she started moving through problem sets with more confidence and fewer pauses.

Meanwhile, in a Year 2 session, India surprised her tutor by using vertical addition without prompting during a money activity—a big step up from needing reminders in earlier lessons.

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 Helensvale Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Gilston State School.