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Heathmont's tutors include a classroom teacher and former Maths Curriculum Leader with over a decade of K–6 experience, university-level lecturers and PhDs in IT, high-ATAR graduates and school Dux recipients, seasoned peer mentors, maths competition winners, and passionate coaches in music, science, coding, sports and creative writing.

Lindsay
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Lindsay

Economics Tutor Mitcham, VIC
I belive helping to build confidence is the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student. Confidence in one area can flow into other areas of study/life. A positive and supportive tutor can have influence on a students life in future years of study and life. Patience, understanding, positive attitude, growth mindset,…
Ali
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Ali

Economics Tutor Vermont, VIC
1)lesson planning: so tutor is confident enough how he will lead the session and deliver his or her content 2)Try to prepare practice question for the content as mathematics can't be learn it comes with the more you practice 3)Give weak student time outside his working hours if he has some queries 4)Try to be friendly and polite so student like…
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Sahib
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Sahib

Economics Tutor Ferntree Gully, VIC
I believe the key purpose of an economics tutor is not only to improve a students grades but also encourage intellectual curiosity. Due to the individuality of each student a personalised experience must be created by tutors, through adapting teaching methods and lesson plans, to stimulate the unique minds of students. Further tutors must…
Rhea
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Rhea

Economics Tutor Vermont South, VIC
I think one of the most important things an economics tutor can do is help students believe in themselves. Sometimes they know more than they think—they just need someone to encourage them and show them they’re capable. And remind students that learning is a process. A tutor should focus on progress, not perfection, and celebrate the small…
Manvee
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Manvee

Economics Tutor Scoresby, VIC
*As an economics tutor most important thing is to understand the student and be friendly with the students .So that they can discuss there promblems easily without any hesitation. * As a tutor i should know about the level of the student and about the student in what ways he/she loves to learn because learning cannot be done with a force full…
Ari
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Ari

Economics Tutor Scoresby, VIC
I think the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is build confidence. Sometime, all it takes is confidence for a student who is unsure about their abilities to really flourish. I'd say my strengths lie in being patient. Given I have recently graduated from highschool, it means I have a better understanding of what students…
Annabel
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Annabel

Economics Tutor Blackburn, VIC
As an economics tutor, I believe that patience and encouragement are essential qualities. Creating a supportive and non-judgmental learning environment empowers students to ask questions without hesitation. Patiently explain concepts, answer questions, and provide constructive feedback to help students build confidence and overcome challenges. I…
Dinh An Quang
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Dinh An Quang

Economics Tutor Blackburn South, VIC
In my opinion, the relationship beyond subject tutoring is the most important aspect of an economics tutor. A great tutor must have the ability to connect deeply with the students to give them personalised teaching methods and materials, which ultimately increase both efficiency and effectiveness in teaching. In order of doing so, a tutor must…
Goutham
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Goutham

Economics Tutor Vermont, VIC
I think that the tutor acts as a mentor for the student. In this role, the tutor should encourage the students to think critically in order to find answers to their questions. By providing the means to discover the answers for themselves, the tutor ensures that the student does not merely address the 'what' of the question but is also able to…
Qijia
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Qijia

Economics Tutor Knoxfield, VIC
I believe the most important thing for a tutor to do is to cultivate the interest and engagement of the students. In Chinese, there is an idiom that roughly translates to "Interest is the best teacher", by actively engaging the interests of students you make learning not a chore, but rather a joy. I believe that my biggest strength lies in my…
Bo
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Bo

Economics Tutor Donvale, VIC
Help them understand something. Adapt to students; builds rapport; knowing how to learn efficiently in my own…
Yu
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Yu

Economics Tutor Burwood East, VIC
The most important things that a tutor can do for the students are resolving their problems and guiding them in solving them independently and passionately by providing professional support and mentoring. I have multiple experiences in both informal tutoring and commercial tutoring with class sizes range from individual sessions to larger groups.…
Peter
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Peter

Economics Tutor Scoresby, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student, not to just explain a certain problem but to help them understand the concept behind it, explain to them why they are doing it. Students need to be motivated, without motivation students lose the desire to learn. I feel that if students understand why they have to do it maths or English…
Aaron
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Aaron

Economics Tutor Box Hill, VIC
Be able to explain things clearly and in a way that the child will understand. Also, it is important to be open to, and encourage questions about any little detail they do not understand to ensure they gain the best understanding of the concepts. Being able to communicate and explain a concept in different ways to ensure the client understands.…
Eddie
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Eddie

Economics Tutor Templestowe, VIC
For a student, the worst thing a tutor can do is to strike fear into them about their progress or their work. I consider a tutor's job to support the student in every way: academically, physically, and psychologically. The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to provide them with realistic hopes: to stand from our perspectives and…

Local Reviews

Sanjana is very happy with Ivana.
Sharn

Inside HeathmontTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Mia focused on mastering multiplication facts with a times tables grid and worked through several practice questions on long division, including problems with decimals.

Year 7 student Jack revised percentages by calculating discounts and converting between fractions and percentages, then practiced financial maths skills such as finding profit and understanding rates of pay.

For Year 8, Ella concentrated on algebraic techniques for solving linear equations and revisited BIDMAS (order of operations) using step-by-step examples to prepare for an upcoming test.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, one student often avoided writing full working, especially when solving for x—this led to confusion with negative signs and extra time spent fixing errors rather than progressing ("needs to improve writing down working out").

In Year 11 English, notes showed that missed classes weren't always followed up; "definitely write those notes up for the missed class on quadrilaterals so we can follow up and make up the missed work."

Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner hesitated to show division steps out of concern for mistakes. As a result, accuracy wavered during multi-step problems and confidence dipped mid-task.

Recent Achievements

One Heathmont tutor noticed a big shift with a Year 10 student who had always hesitated to ask for help; during recent sessions, she started checking her logic out loud and clarifying steps, instead of quietly guessing.

In Year 8 maths, another student finally broke through on algebra: after weeks of confusion with expanding and simplifying expressions, he solved several equations independently and even explained his process back.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 learner who used to rush worded problems began underlining key information before working—leading her to solve all division questions correctly without prompting.

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 Realm Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Great Ryrie Primary School.