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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Kaleen's tutors feature a former high school maths lecturer and Dean's Excellence Award recipient, an experienced K–12 afterschool educator, a private maths tutor with 89.5% Year 12 results, an Australian Maths Competition distinction winner (ATAR 93.55), and accomplished peer mentors and youth volunteers passionate about teaching and academic achievement.

John
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John

Economics Tutor Bonner, ACT
In my opinion, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to provide personalized guidance and support, foster a positive learning environment, and encourage critical thinking and independent learning. Tutors should strive to understand their students' unique learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses, and adapt their approach…

Local Reviews

Wenyu was great, our daughter is happy.
Emma

Inside KaleenTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Angus focused on revising factorising quadratic equations using the sum-product and pairing methods, as well as reviewing his test and refining his assignment.

In Year 10, Olivia practised expanding, simplifying, dividing and multiplying surds alongside Pythagoras' theorem problems.

Meanwhile, Year 3 student Atiana worked on basic addition and subtraction skills through targeted worksheets and games to build confidence with number facts.

Recent Challenges

In recent Year 10 and 11 Maths sessions, the main barrier has been process-related: one student "rushed through" trigonometry and algebra tests, resulting in missed steps and repeated sign errors—particularly when back-checking was skipped.

In Year 3 English, another student needed prompting to start sentences and struggled with capitalisation when planning NAPLAN tasks; following written instructions without support proved challenging.

A Year 7 learner sometimes jumped to answers in algebra but didn't write out working, which made verbal explanations difficult ("he forgets to write down the working and seems to get a bit tangled"). This often led to confusion during review.

Recent Achievements

One Kaleen tutor noticed a real shift in Angus, a high schooler who used to hesitate with factorising quadratics—this week, he managed polynomial long division on his own and started making his own "cheat sheet" of tricky topics.

In another session, Asha (Year 10) had struggled with dividing surds but now talks through her solutions out loud and checks her answers herself before moving on.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student who once guessed at reading comprehension questions has begun using the book as a reference point to double-check answers after reading aloud.

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 Belconnen Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like University of Canberra High School Kaleen.