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Coasters Retreat's tutors include a primary school teacher with years of classroom experience, a Manly Selective ATAR 98 graduate and peer leader, an award-winning youth mentor and maths club leader, seasoned K–12 private tutors in English and STEM, and accomplished coaches and instructors skilled at inspiring confidence in students of all ages.

Ellis
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Ellis

Economics Tutor Church Point, NSW
The most important thing an economics tutor can do is to provide the student with deep understanding of concepts so that the student can approach future challenges with the confidence that they can work through it on their own, even if it is unfamiliar. There is so much more to mathematics than just memorisation as so many people believe, they key…
Leigh
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Leigh

Economics Tutor Pearl Beach, NSW
I think the best thing an economics tutor can do is make learning feel achievable. A big part of that is adapting to how each student learns, breaking things down in a way that makes sense to them, and giving them the confidence to tackle challenges on their own. Tutoring isn't just about getting through the syllabus, it's about showing students…
1st Lesson Trial

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Riley
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Riley

Economics Tutor Scotland Island, NSW
Listen. I think it is pivotal for an economics tutor to be able to listen to the student. Be it regarding concepts or content, or just a tutors teaching style. Listening and responding to feedback is essential. Determination. When teaching a student something for the first time, it can be very difficult for them to understand a concept. So, as a…
chhadaphea
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chhadaphea

Economics Tutor Church Point, NSW
In my view, the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to serve as a catalyst for independent learning. My primary goal is not simply to help them complete the current assignment, but to equip them with the tools, study habits, and critical thinking strategies necessary to succeed on their own long after our sessions end. This…
Gursher
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Gursher

Economics Tutor Church Point, NSW
1. Help them towards their study milestones so they have an unhindered path towards any given career of choice. 3. Understand something rather than memorising it. I hold this statement in significance. Having studied in different countries I understand the difference in teaching. Tutoring being 1 on 1 or in small groups allows for this. I…
Anri
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Anri

Economics Tutor Church Point, NSW
Cater to their personal needs and ensure they feel supported by celebrating their wins. I love interacting and supporting others with their goals and endeavours. I am able to explain complex concepts in a simple way to ensure others understand and are able to explain it to others…

Local Reviews

Very happy with how Gloria is going with both Mattie & Jessica.
Brian Thorburn

Inside Coasters RetreatTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Ava worked on converting fractions to decimals and completed challenging decimal addition as well as large multiplication problems.

In Year 8, Ben tackled surface area and volume calculations for cylinders, pyramids, and cones using diagrams to visualise each shape.

For Year 10, James focused on solving linear equations and practiced expanding and factorising quadratics through a series of progressively harder examples.

Recent Challenges

Written work in Year 9 algebra was sometimes hard to follow—working steps weren't clearly set out, which made it tough to spot where sign errors crept in.

In a Year 11 trigonometry session, confusion arose over which angle to use when multiple angles were involved, slowing down progress.

For a Year 7 student, mixing up area and circumference formulas showed that organization of notes could be improved for quicker recall during problem-solving.

One primary student avoided writing working for mental addition tasks, leading to repeated calculation slips and less confidence when tackling two-digit sums aloud.

Recent Achievements

One Coasters Retreat tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student's approach to algebra: where she previously guessed at solutions, she now draws diagrams and writes out the correct formula before attempting each question.

A Year 12 student who used to rush through calculus problems without showing working is now methodically applying the product and chain rule, leading to fewer errors and clearer solutions.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner who relied heavily on counting fingers for addition has started using number bonds and 'rainbow' strategies instead—last session, he completed all his larger additions without finger counting at all.

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 Avalon Community Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Maria Regina Catholic Primary School.