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O'Connor's tutors include a certified primary school teacher and maths specialist, an assistant university lecturer awarded for topping mathematics, a violin and academic mentor with a 98.5 ATAR, an engineering dean's commendation recipient, experienced K–12 English and dance coaches, peer mentors in biomedical science and law, and multiple subject duxes and award-winners.

Stephanie
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Stephanie

Economics Tutor Nedlands, WA
Often if students are seeking tutoring, they are struggling or in a place of doubt about their abilities. Providing a comfortable, safe environment where students can feel reassured about their own abilities is so important. I know before I developed a passion for mathematics especially, I struggled with and detested the subject. As soon as I…
Matt
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Matt

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
The most important part of being a tutor is to provide support. I gain trust with my students by showing them that I am there to support them fully. I engage with them one on one and ensure that there is truly no question 'too stupid' that they cannot ask me for help with. I find over time how the student personally learns and work with their own…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Raymond
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Raymond

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
- Make sure that any concerns a student has regarding their education is addressed appropriately. - Being a good and trustworthy role model. - Inspiring students and encourage them to realise their passion for learning. - Address any difficulties in their schoolwork - Assist them in reaching their full potential. - Provide…
Aadarsh
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Aadarsh

Economics Tutor Nedlands, WA
The most important thing is helping the student actually understand the material, not just memorise it. Once they understand why something works, they can apply it to different problems, which is especially important in subjects like Mathematics Applications and higher-level maths. It’s also really important to build the student’s…
Ingrid
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Ingrid

Economics Tutor Nedlands, WA
The most important thing for a tutor to do is to guide and support their student, helping them gain skills in the subject, but also to help them gain confidence in their skills and the class. I am patient, and can change my language and way of conveying the content to help people who learn in different…
Surabhi
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Surabhi

Economics Tutor Nedlands, WA
The most important thing I can do as a tutor would be building a sense of connection and trust with them and be a friend or mentor who can help them understand their own strengths and help them learn new things in the best way possible. As a tutor, it is important to be able to understand what a student wishes to improve and what they're good at…
Natalie
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Natalie

Economics Tutor Leeming, WA
In my opinion, a tutor has to be able to communicate effectively with a student. There is a clear difference between having knowledge and actually being able to teach a particular field of study. It is absolutely vital that a tutor speaks to a student in a way that is easily understood by the student but at the same time also engaging. This way of…
Mehardeep
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Mehardeep

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
Listening is the most important thing a tutor can do for the student. Tutors cannot understand a student's requirements and expectations until they effectively give time to the student for communicating the same. However, listening alone does not suffice. A tutor must act on these requirements and prepare custom learning plans. Being someone who…
Wei Yuan
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Wei Yuan

Economics Tutor Como, WA
As a tutor, improving student's grade is definitely one of it. But I do focus on their understanding on the concept and how does everything works, and believe student knowing the concept would score better grade. Obviously, its still depend what the parents' aim for their child. Otherwise, the best I can do is to help them understand and clear…

Local Reviews

Karmel is fantastic. My daughter has responded really well in only the first few weeks. He is very patient and explains things at a level that she can understand. Her teacher has also noticed an improvement. She also likes him and doesn't protest when it comes to extra maths after school!
Alina, Bicton

Inside O'ConnorTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Jimmy worked on rounding numbers using number lines and practiced long division with multi-digit numbers, reinforcing understanding through worksheets and visual aids.

Year 9 student Abbi focused on solving quadratic equations using the quadratic formula and tackled challenging problems involving surds and fractional indices.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Isabel revised trigonometry concepts, including perpendicular and parallel lines, and strengthened her grasp of simultaneous equations by completing exam-style practice questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 5 English, one student highlighted almost every word in a comprehension passage, making it hard to focus on key information—"he took considerable time to read because he highlighted almost every word."

In Year 7–8 Maths, repeated reminders were needed for one student to write down full working for multiplication and not just the answer; feedback on this was often overlooked.

A Year 10 student didn't review notes before lessons, which meant valuable lesson time was spent repeating prior material rather than progressing.

Meanwhile, a senior student struggled with organizing files and notes efficiently, slowing revision for tests.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in O'Connor noticed that Jimmy, who previously found rounding quite confusing, managed to complete a worksheet on his own this week and now applies the concept independently—just last session he needed step-by-step guidance.

In Year 10, Isabel made a significant leap in her recent maths exam, moving from 60% to 81%, especially impressing with her ability to tackle complex worded problems after initially struggling with them.

Abbi, working on quadratic equations in high school, went from needing frequent reminders to now solving standard quadratics quickly and without any 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 Willagee Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Caralee Community School.