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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Mona Vale include a primary school teacher with years of K–6 classroom expertise, an HSC dux and university maths scholar who topped Extension 1 and 2, multiple peer mentors and youth coaches, a Maths Olympiad medalist, English specialists, experienced music tutors, and high-ATAR graduates with state-level academic awards and leadership experience.

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…
Arian
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Arian

Economics Tutor Narraweena, NSW
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to plan ahead and to revise to ensure that the student is able to complete previously covered topics. My strengths as a tutor are my planning ability and improvisation which may be necessary if the student is behind on work or the parents change what they wish to focus…
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Helga
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Helga

Economics Tutor Narraweena, NSW
Having both been the tutee and the tutor, I believe that it is imperative that an economics tutor is supportive of the student and caters their teaching to the student's specific needs. Tutoring is only truly effective when the student is completely engaged with the tutor and I believe that this can only happen when the student believes that they…
Ethan
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Ethan

Economics Tutor North Curl Curl, NSW
I think one of the most important things an economics tutor can do for a student is be somewhat a friend rather than just an instructor or teacher. This is because I believe establishing a bit of a personal bond is very important for a successful tutor-tutee relationship as the student is more likely to be open about more of the issues that they…
Tommi
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Tommi

Economics Tutor Belrose, NSW
The most important thing an economics tutor can do is help their students understand the concepts not just give them the answers. I feel like I am an easy person to talk to so that my students would feel comfortable asking questions or making…
Gursher
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Gursher

Economics Tutor Bayview, 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…
chhadaphea
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chhadaphea

Economics Tutor Bayview, NSW
In my view, the most important thing an economics 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.…
Peter
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Peter

Economics Tutor Elanora Heights, NSW
I think the biggest benefit a tutor can have is to help instill in a student a sense of confidence in their ability to learn. Regardless of how much subject matter a student is able to retain, they will have a lot of learning to do beyond when they are being tutored, so I believe it is at least as important for students to be ‘learning how to…
Anri
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Anri

Economics Tutor Bayview, 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…
Riley
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Riley

Economics Tutor Church Point, NSW
Listen. I think it is pivotal for a 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 tutor, I am…
Luke
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Luke

Economics Tutor Narrabeen, NSW
Enriching an attitude of positivity and consistency towards education within a student I believe patience and a strategic teaching attitude are my key…
Diana
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Diana

Economics Tutor Wheeler Heights, NSW
I think one of the most important traits a tutor needs is patience. It is not helpful to make the student feel stupid or inadequate and of course each student is unique and learns at a different pace. Patience is pivotal to make the student feel like it is a safe space to ask questions, be willing to rephrase concepts until they understand and…
Balraj
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Balraj

Economics Tutor Dee Why, NSW
Giving a student freedom to think and question are most important things a tutor should do, additionally not restricting students to one method and a rigid way should be the priority. Teaching being my abosolute favourite thing is my strength also knowing the subjects deeply adds to it. I have been tutoring children from class 1 to 5 in india and…

Local Reviews

Thomas was excellent and we were very impressed.
Natasha

Inside Mona ValeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Emily focused on adding and subtracting fractions with different denominators, practising how to find the lowest common multiple, and extended to multiplying and dividing fractions.

In Year 9, Ethan worked through solving simultaneous equations using both substitution and elimination methods, as well as simplifying algebraic expressions from past exam questions.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Grace reviewed linear systems by modelling equations in the form y = mx + b and practised drawing and analysing graphs to solve problems graphically and analytically.

Recent Challenges

In Year 4 maths, reluctance to attempt fraction and decimal questions was evident; "why are we doing this?" signaled disengagement, especially with tasks like dividing by 10/100/1000 or fraction addition.

For a Year 7 student, avoidance of written working—preferring mental calculation in multiplication problems—meant steps were missed and errors went unchecked.

In Year 11 trigonometry, hesitation in identifying relevant information from word problems led to confusion when isolating unknowns.

Meanwhile, a senior student's algebra work showed unclear layout: as one tutor noted, "handwriting and laying out his work" needed attention since missteps in solution flow muddled correct reasoning.

Recent Achievements

One Mona Vale tutor noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student who had always felt lost with fractions—by the end of their session, he could explain what fractions mean conceptually and used visual grouping to work out equivalent fractions on his own.

In another case, a Year 11 student moved from confusion to confidently expanding brackets and factorising expressions with powers, picking up how to handle negatives without prompting.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to rush through perimeter questions now explains not just how but why the rules work before solving them step by step.

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 Mona Vale Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Mona Vale Public School.