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Mount Kuring Gai's tutors include an ATAR 98 achiever and music competition winner, state-ranked linguist with Maths Olympiad honors, seasoned high school and university maths specialists, a Bachelor of Education candidate, peer mentors and youth leaders, plus creative STEM standouts—many with years of experience teaching, coaching or supporting K–12 students.

Ahsan
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Ahsan

Economics Tutor Mount Colah, NSW
Establishing a routine is one of the most important things an economics tutor can do for a student. Tutor helps the student to identify the root-cause of a problem and then finding out the solution. A schedule is followed throughout the teaching tenure.This practice not only helps the student to excel in their studies, but also in their lives as…
Malavika
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Malavika

Economics Tutor Hornsby, NSW
I think the most important thing an economics tutor can do is ensure the student knows we are on their side and only want them to improve. To create a comfortable places where all questions, marks, practise papers and ideas can be discussed without judgement. To be a person where they can just focus on improvement and nothing else I think my…
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Matthew
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Matthew

Economics Tutor Mount Colah, NSW
I consider the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to ensure that the student fully understands the content being taught at their level. I think it can be quite easy for a tutor to rush or even skip the easy stuff in favour for the more interesting, harder content, which can leave a student lost and feeling inadequate.…
Allen
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Allen

Economics Tutor Wahroonga, NSW
- Teach them how to be passionate about their subjects - Teach them how to logically solve a problem so that they will be able to apply this method to all problems that they encounter, and hopefully solve them. - Working hard, but also smarter in order to achieve success. - Patience - Honest - Friendly - Kind - Passionate - Committed -…
Jared
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Jared

Economics Tutor North Turramurra, NSW
I think the most important thing for a tutor to do is to continue to provide ongoing support for its student. The tutor needs to help the student through their educational journey by providing extensive resources for their students in order for them to grow to become successful students. I am quite flexible with my time which allows me to help my…
Jerry
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Jerry

Economics Tutor Turramurra, NSW
As a passionate tutor, the responsibility to create confidence and trust is vital in learning. Confidence allows students to tackle difficult and complex problems, serving as a 'stepping stone' to build a mathematical foundation. It can also act as an incentive for students to engage in lessons comprised of challenges. Furthermore, building trust…

Local Reviews

We found Rishabh to be very professional, reliable and prompt in replying to correspondence
Karen

Inside Mount Kuring-GaiTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Emily worked on adding and subtracting fractions with different denominators, and practiced converting between fractions and decimals.

In Year 8, Jake focused on simplifying algebraic expressions involving different orders of operations, as well as solving one-step algebraic equations.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Chloe reviewed factorising quadratics using the difference of two squares and perfect square methods, also extending to non-quadratic expressions for extra challenge.

Recent Challenges

Missed homework was a clear issue for one Year 9 student, with the tutor noting "missed homework this week"—this led to gaps that showed up in class when recalling earlier methods.

A Year 11 student tended to overuse their calculator during time trials, which meant less working was shown and mistakes went unchecked: "Be careful to not overuse calculator and neglect working out as this led to silly mistakes."

For a Year 7 algebra task, the habit of avoiding writing full steps made it harder to spot sign errors.

In primary years, one student sometimes forgot strategies just covered; this became obvious when asked to explain fraction concepts aloud.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Mount Kuring Gai noticed a Year 10 student who used to overlook her own errors now actively self-corrects during maths assessments, even spotting mistakes in teacher solutions—a big shift from earlier sessions.

Another high schooler recently applied trigonometric rules to abstract problems after initially struggling, using diagrams and extraction strategies to break them down independently.

Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who previously hesitated to ask for clarification is now comfortable voicing when she's unsure and engages fully with new material; last week, she finished all her multiplication practice without any 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 Berowra Branch Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Mount Kuring-gai Public School.