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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Manly include a university academic scholarship recipient with years of K–10 tutoring, an ATAR 99.1 physics major with three years' experience, multiple school captains and peer mentors, medal-winning STEM and maths competitors, seasoned coaches in sports and rhythmic gymnastics, and science graduates passionate about guiding young learners to their potential.

Elliette
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Elliette

Economics Tutor Gumdale, QLD
A tutor's key roles include understanding individual needs, building confidence, providing constructive feedback, encouraging critical thinking, and motivating students to excel academically and personally. One of my strengths as a tutor is my ability to adopt a personalised approach for each student, tailoring my teaching methods to suit their…
Wiman
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Wiman

Economics Tutor Gumdale, QLD
The main focus should be teaching the subject in question in the most simple and interesting manner. Catering to each student’s level of understanding and knowing the correct speed at which I should proceed in order for the student to perceive the subject is also of immense importance. While teaching the subject, it is also very important…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Blake
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Blake

Economics Tutor Wynnum West, QLD
Make them feel comfortable with the dynamic and help them realise they are able learn new things Communication and customising a lesson to each…
Taige
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Taige

Economics Tutor Birkdale, QLD
The most important thing for an economics tutor to do is inspire self-believe and uncover topics that may become a passion for children. From this, tutors should foster a willingness to develop the child's skills and even potentially find a career path or tertiary education option within a specific area. My willingness to listen and respond calmly…
Stephen
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Stephen

Economics Tutor Alexandra Hills, QLD
The most important things an economics tutor can do for a student is to listen to them and find out what they are having trouble understanding and helping them to be more confident. Also, it is important that the student feels the tutor cares about their progress and will take their time to make things easier for the student to understand. I think…
Hiral
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Hiral

Economics Tutor Carina, QLD
The most important thing is like listen to the students and as having patience at all the time and also being creative with them and using the different learning styles. Also teach the students how to solve the problem. As I have many strengths but for Tutor I can teach and guide properly and also if they don't understand then I will try to…
Saumyaa
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Saumyaa

Economics Tutor Carina, QLD
the most important things an economics tutor can do is to be patient with students and cater the learning experience to each individual student because each student learns in a different way. I have a passion for mathematics and for helping other students find joy in learning…

Local Reviews

Very easy to deal with and they were able to find a tutor specific to my daughter's needs. My daughter is already feeling more confident and understanding the work after a few weeks. We are very happy.
Bron Storey, Wynnum

Inside ManlyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 2 student Lucas practised skip-counting by twos, fives and tens, and identified even and odd numbers using hands-on activities.

Year 9 student Ava revised index laws and exponential equations, then tackled algebraic factorising to consolidate class content.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Ethan focused on differentiation in Unit 3 Topic 2 and reviewed graphical representations of functions, connecting them to real-world problem-solving scenarios.

Recent Challenges

In Year 11 Maths, a student's over-reliance on practicing only familiar question types between lessons led to missed opportunities for growth in challenging topics—"should spend as much time as possible on it tonight and tomorrow to maximise result," noted one tutor before the final exam.

Meanwhile, in Year 8 algebra sessions, skipping written steps made error-tracing difficult: "writing down the steps of every problem so it's easier to go back and check for possible mistakes" was highlighted.

For a younger learner in Year 3, confusion with regrouping tens and ones surfaced when new drawings appeared in notebooks; hesitation to review these concepts slowed progress during subtraction activities.

Recent Achievements

One Manly tutor recently noticed a big change in a Year 10 student who had struggled to apply algebraic techniques; now he's confidently solving quadratics mostly on his own, often needing just a hint instead of step-by-step help.

Another high schooler in Year 12 moved from confusion about trigonometric functions to independently using sine and cosine rules across multiple problems—she even chose which rule to use without prompting.

Meanwhile, a younger primary student, Lucas, has gone from guessing at regrouping tens and ones to completing addition and subtraction exercises accurately on his own and finishing homework without 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 Wynnum Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St John Vianney's Primary School.