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Tutors in New Lambton Heights include a university PhD mathematics scholar and ex-assistant professor, a 13-year veteran English teacher with over 24,000 hours' experience, an early childhood education leader, seasoned K–12 maths tutors with high academic honours (ATARs to 95+), peer mentors, and youth coaches skilled at engaging and inspiring students.

Johan
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Johan

Economics Tutor Elermore Vale, NSW
I believe the most important thing an economics tutor can do is understand the student and their mindset towards school and schoolwork. If you understand a student, you can adapt your tutoring to give them the most support for them to achieve what they desire. I am encouraging and supportive. I know the content (just have dig through my brain for…
Sneha
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Sneha

Economics Tutor Charlestown, NSW
Build trust and rapport. Indemnify knowledge gaps. Set goals and expectations. Create personalised plans. Provide feedback and encouragement. Flexibility in teaching styles and approach to meet individual students…
1st Lesson Trial

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Candy
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Candy

Economics Tutor Callaghan, NSW
Beyond just explaining concepts, I aim to make learning enjoyable and effective. I focus on building a strong foundation, encouraging critical thinking, and boosting confidence so students feel prepared for exams and real-world applications. My goal is to create a supportive learning environment where students feel comfortable asking questions and…
Arnav
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Arnav

Economics Tutor Speers Point, NSW
The most important thing by far is engagement. Tutoring is good, although it can only do so much if the students interest is elsewhere. The best thing an economics tutor can do is help the student engage more in school as the student will spend 80% of their time in the classroom and 20% with a tutor so using that 80% to your advantage is the most…
ANNAMOL
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ANNAMOL

Economics Tutor Lambton, NSW
Repeating topics as many times as needed Calm, compassionate, Repeat topics as many times as needed, Good communication skills, Especially good in teaching…
Shreya
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Shreya

Economics Tutor Jesmond, NSW
Make sure that the student is comfortable with your way of teaching and is actively involved. Tutoring is not only about jabbering stuff even though the student doesn’t understand a single thing. You have to take it slow and steady until your student is confident enough and can explain the same concept back to you even well. - calmness…
Ka Ning
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Ka Ning

Economics Tutor Birmingham Gardens, NSW
Motivate them to learn and love studying Patience and try to put difficult concepts into a simple…
Mohammed Abrar
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Mohammed Abrar

Economics Tutor Tighes Hill, NSW
Understanding the student is the most primary thing. Without understanding the student you can explain him an entire Library and the student will still be an illiterate or at worse develop fear or disinterest in learning. Connection, understanding, acknowledging and tailoring my approach towards each individual who's different from the…
Richard
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Richard

Economics Tutor Shortland, NSW
The biggest thing would be to help students understand that ignorance is not failure. Just because they don't know something "basic", that does not mean they are worse than others, or are stupider, or are not going to succeed. It simply means they were not taught in a way that makes sense to them. This could be for a number of reasons, and not…
Michael
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Michael

Economics Tutor Newcastle East, NSW
- Motivate and allow students to understand and realise their goals and potential - Break down difficult concepts into smaller constituents for better understanding - Understand a student's specific needs and learning styles and tailor teaching to this - Develop a structured study plan for improvement outside of tutoring sessions - Recognise…

Local Reviews

The tutoring with Paul was excellent and extremely professional and I have no hesitation in recommending him and your business as the conduit between the tutor and the client. Thank you for your professionalism and it has been a pleasure to deal with Paul and your firm.
David

Inside New Lambton HeightsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student Julian worked on identifying faces, edges, and vertices of 3D shapes using hands-on questions, then practised two-digit addition and subtraction before tackling some challenging four- and five-digit calculations.

Year 9 student Emily focused on simplifying surds and indices, as well as rationalising denominators in index form.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Josh prepared for HSC Physics by analysing the photoelectric effect and Einstein's postulates, alongside practising responses to extended particle theory questions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student struggled to show all working in algebra, with the tutor noting, "demonstrating all steps of working out" remains a challenge—this led to hidden errors when negative indices appeared.

In Year 11, shallow written responses in HSC English limited marks: the lack of planning meant ideas stayed surface-level rather than being fully developed.

One senior student had difficulty managing time during trial HSC exams; rushing through calculation questions resulted in answers that didn't match formulas given.

Meanwhile, a primary-aged learner's avoidance of writing large numbers made multi-digit problems confusing and slowed progress on place value tasks.

Recent Achievements

One New Lambton Heights tutor noticed a Year 12 student who previously hesitated with financial maths now confidently tackles multi-step problems, especially after mastering compounding period conversions and choosing the right formulas without prompting.

In Year 10, another student who used to skip steps is now writing out every stage of worded probability questions, which helped him finally interpret "and/or" problems independently.

Meanwhile, a younger student in Grade 3 recently surprised his tutor by naming all the main 3D shapes correctly—something he'd found tricky before—and finished the session reading out each shape's features without pausing for help.

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 New Lambton Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like New Lambton Heights Infants School.