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Tutors in Connewarre include a seasoned K–12 teacher with international experience, multiple assistant professors and university lecturers, primary school aides, VCE subject dux and ATAR 93+ achievers, peer mentors and competition participants, youth coaches, and educators holding postgraduate degrees in science, engineering, education, pharmacy, law, and mathematics.

Gouripriya
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Gouripriya

Economics Tutor Marshall, VIC
The most important things an economics tutor can do for a student are to clarify concepts, boost confidence, personalize learning, offer support, foster critical thinking, set and track goals, empower independence, promote a love of learning, provide constructive feedback, and create a positive learning environment. A tutor plays a multifaceted…
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Shasthri

Economics Tutor Mount Duneed, VIC
Being real with your students. Your students should know that they can always count on you and that you are always there for them to get help at any time. whatever you teach should be taught in a way that they will never forget. I love to explain difficult problems in a simple way by relating it with day to day activities. As I am not very…
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Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Local Reviews

Amanda is terrific and we are super lucky to have her tutoring Kristo
Ben

Inside ConnewarreTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Maya worked through index laws and surds, focusing on simplifying expressions and applying the rules to different examples.

In Year 11, Daniel practiced anti-differentiation by solving textbook problems involving basic terms and brackets, then used coordinates to find specific equations.

For Year 12, Olivia revised calculus concepts like differentiating using the chain rule and quotient rule, tackling past exam questions about finding equations of tangents and working through application-based problems with gradients and stationary points.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8, one student struggled to bring required materials—"Needs to remember her calculator"—which led to wasted time during lessons.

In Year 10, a tutor noted "Dean seems a bit slow with note-taking," so less content was covered and his notes were harder to use for revision.

A senior student in Methods doubted herself during complex questions: she "often knew precisely what to do, but second-guessed herself," which slowed her progress on trigonometry applications.

Another VCE student relied on memory rather than calculators for Pythagoras, making avoidable errors that undermined confidence when tackling harder problems.

Recent Achievements

One Connewarre tutor recently noticed a big shift in a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with trigonometric identities; she now recalls exact values for sin and cos without prompting and confidently explains her process for finding tan, showing real mastery where she once paused or guessed.

Another high schooler, previously unsure about applying differentiation rules, has begun independently using the quotient rule and now reaches for the calculator to check her work—something she avoided before.

Meanwhile, a younger student who'd struggled to keep up with fractions surprised her tutor by tackling addition and multiplication of improper fractions on her own, finishing all ten problems without any errors.

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 Grovedale Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Catherine of Siena Catholic Primary School.