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Private business-studies tutors that come to you in person or online

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Ashton's tutors include a PhD-qualified science educator with secondary teaching experience, a robotics Olympiad prize-winner and National Youth Science Forum participant (ATAR 99.55), seasoned Kumon maths instructors, peer mentors in English and music, ATAR 98–99.95 scorers, a gymnastics coach of six years, and university students excelling in physics, engineering and medicine.

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Youting

Business Studies Tutor Toorak Gardens, SA
I think the most important thing is help students understand concepts and build confidence. A tutor should be patient, supportive, and able to adapt to the student’s needs. Creating a positive and comfortable learning environment is also very important, so students feel encouraged to learn. The goal is to help students become more confident and…
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Britta

Business Studies Tutor Woodforde, SA
Pay attention to the student and be attentive to their needs. Show interest in their progress as well as help set them goals. Understand that stress and anxiety needs to be addressed as something important and skills to move pass this are needed. Tutors should not and can not ever give up on a learner. I have a solid understanding of…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Business Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

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yashnit

Business Studies Tutor Hectorville, SA
In my opinion, tutors can help students in setting goals and achieve them from time to time. As a leader, they need to implement situational leadership and try to incorporate different teaching methods for different kinds of students. My strengths would basically include my communication skills and assertiveness with the students. In addition, I…
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Taison

Business Studies Tutor Glenside, SA
The most important thing is to answer their questions and teach them well, not just know copy the answers down but actually understand what's going and teach them my own experience As a Chinese background student, I think my math is good and I'm a people person as I have customer service for more than two years and I really want to make more…
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Jessica

Business Studies Tutor Highbury, SA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to be prepared for each session, including having a strong grasp of the content, being able to answer and explain each of the questions the student has. Having the ability to transfer the knowledge the tutor has to the student in a way that is easy to understand and is also correct is…
Thomas
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Thomas

Business Studies Tutor Evandale, SA
One of the most important roles of a tutor is to provide students with a framework of learning techniques and methods that will remain applicable in future areas of study. A tutor should also foster a love or appreciation of learning through active engagement with their pupils; this is by far the most important thing a tutor can do for a student.…

Local Reviews

Josh is very professional, understands my complex needs and seems like a lovely person as well.
Jana, Carey Gully

Inside AshtonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Fractions work included addition and subtraction with both common and different denominators, plus simplifying mixed numbers, using diagrams and quick writes to reinforce understanding.

In Year 10, Alyssia tackled chemistry concepts like titrations—calculating molar ratios and manipulating equations such as n = m/M and C = n/V—and also prepared for her exam by balancing redox equations and working through net ionic equations.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student focused on surds, logs, and indices for an upcoming test, practising simplification of expressions involving these forms as well as reviewing basic index laws.

Recent Challenges

A Year 3 student struggled to maintain focus and produced handwriting that was difficult to read, with inconsistent use of capital letters mid-sentence—"sentences need to be conscientious and not rambling," a tutor observed.

In Year 10 Chemistry, reliance on formula sheets meant the student hesitated to attempt molar ratio questions without checking previous answers, slowing progress on unfamiliar problems.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 Maths student often avoided tackling abstract or "outside the box" questions unless guided, tending instead to repeat familiar processes rather than experiment with new approaches. This led to uncertainty when test formats shifted unexpectedly.

Recent Achievements

One Ashton tutor recently saw a Year 9 student move from relying on prompts for fraction problems to confidently working through them with minimal help, especially recognising when to use commas in writing—something that used to trip him up.

In a senior chemistry session, Alyssia shifted from needing step-by-step support on titration equations to solving even complex mixed-ratio questions independently by the end of the lesson.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student arrived well-prepared, quickly identified exactly which quadratic concepts he wanted clarified, and guided the session by asking targeted questions—showing far more initiative than before.

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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Norton Summit Primary School.