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Carey Gully's tutors include a PhD physicist and university practical demonstrator, a Master of Teaching-qualified science educator with K–12 experience, accomplished maths and English graduates with ATARs up to 99.55, multi-award-winning robotics competitors, seasoned peer mentors, experienced music and sports coaches, and passionate academic Olympiad participants across STEM disciplines.

Cian
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Cian

Economics Tutor Teringie, SA
Be able to communicate information clearly and concisely, as well as being flexible enough to come up with different explanations for topics when a certain method isn't understood. I think it's also very important that an economics tutor is able to present the information in an engaging way, to help build a passion for the subject. I am friendly…
Olivia
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Olivia

Economics Tutor Stirling, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be able to teach them skills that they can use in their studies after they are finished with a tutor. Obviously it is a tutors job to teach them the task at hand, but I believe a great tutor is able to teach the student skills that will allow them to do better in school without the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Local Reviews

Tobin is great, Una really liked him.
Jana, Carey Gully

Inside Carey GullyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Alyssia worked through titration calculations in chemistry, focusing on using and rearranging the formula n = m/M = CV and interpreting molar ratios.

In Year 10, Alex revised quadratic equations by practising factorisation and tackling problem-solving questions from past tests.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student spent time adding and subtracting mixed number fractions with different denominators, as well as developing creative writing skills through short paragraph exercises that focused on punctuation like commas and exclamation points.

Recent Challenges

Handwriting and layout have been a barrier for some in primary years—messy or inconsistent script, such as "capital letters in the middle of sentences," made working hard to follow and sometimes led to overlooked errors.

In Year 8 algebra, a tendency to skip writing out reasoning left gaps: "he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors."

For Year 10, over-reliance on looking back at previous answers instead of attempting questions independently slowed growth in problem-solving tasks.

One senior student lost marks on a geometry test because small errors were not checked before submitting—despite knowing the content well.

Recent Achievements

One Carey Gully tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to lose marks on chemistry titration equations due to second-guessing, but now completes even mixed-ratio problems without any prompts.

A Year 9 learner has shifted from making frequent errors with algebra and variables to openly asking clarifying questions when stuck, instead of silently guessing her way through.

In Year 4 maths, a student who previously hesitated with fractions is now able to add and subtract mixed numbers with little prompting—last week he worked through three fraction word problems in a row without needing reminders.

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 Uraidla Primary School.