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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Parklea include a current maths and chemistry tutor with four years' experience across K–12, a high school dux and peer mentor with ATAR 98+, a science teacher for all ages up to Year 12, an English specialist with First Class Honours and coaching college expertise, plus Duke of Edinburgh awardees and accomplished student leaders.

Samin
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Samin

Economics Tutor Woodcroft, NSW
A tutor should have the patience to teach a concept to a student and focus on practicising that concept until the student is confident in the area of study. I am kind and very patient and will not be frustrated if a student does not understand the concept the first, 2nd 3rd time. I have experience as a student of private tutoring and I understand…
Alec
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Alec

Economics Tutor North Kellyville, NSW
Developing a friendship with the student. A friendship makes both feel more comfortable in the work they are doing as many aspects with be easier to handle as you have likely mastered communication with each other. For the student it will also give the subject more interest and therefore more confidence in learning it. I believe my strength will…
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Dillon
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Dillon

Economics Tutor Baulkham Hills, NSW
A tutor's purpose is to cover a student's weak points that they may not be able to understand in school. They need to be able to effectively supplement a student and allow them to reach their full potential. I believe my ability to draw on my own experiences in order to explain difficult concepts more easily. This also combines with my…
Mohab
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Mohab

Economics Tutor Castle Hill, NSW
I think the most important something a tutor can do for a student when it comes to trying to teach them is, being close to them and on their level. That way, it is easier for the student to absorb information coming from you as it would feel like the information is coming from a friend and not someone who is greater than them or better than them…
riana
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riana

Economics Tutor Prospect, NSW
I believe the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to build their confidence, support their individual learning needs, and foster a genuine understanding of the subject. It's not just about helping them get the right answers, but about teaching them how to approach problems, think critically, and develop independent learning…
Keerthan
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Keerthan

Economics Tutor Box Hill, NSW
I think the most important things a tutor can do are build the student’s confidence, create a positive and supportive learning environment, and tailor their approach to the student’s individual needs. A tutor should help students feel comfortable asking questions and make learning engaging so they develop both understanding and the skills to…

Local Reviews

I am rating Ezy Math Tutoring 5/5. My son's tutor and him clicked really well and they well extremely well together. EzyMath Tutoring also email me weekly to check how my son is going and his progress which is very impressive and this shows they care and want kids to do well.
Devina, Parklea

Inside ParkleaTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Emily focused on adding and subtracting fractions, including converting between mixed and improper forms, as well as building confidence with basic algebra skills like combining like terms and using tables of values to plot linear graphs.

For Year 10, Nathan worked through trigonometric functions by breaking down sine, cosine, and tangent calculations for right-angled triangles, then moved on to applying these skills in solving surface area problems involving composite shapes.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Priya tackled financial mathematics topics such as calculating simple and compound interest along with practical work on taxation scenarios from the Mathematics Standard 2 curriculum.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student often left more challenging algebra homework incomplete, focusing only on easier problems and missing crucial practice with two-step equations.

"She skipped harder BIDMAS questions set for revision," noted one tutor, which slowed her confidence when facing school assessments.

In Year 11 Advanced Maths, another student relied heavily on memorising formulas without understanding when to apply them—especially with trigonometric identities—leading to confusion during problem-solving tasks.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 learner struggled to finish times tables memorisation, causing hesitation when adding fractions.

The gap showed up most clearly when asked to find common denominators in classwork.

Recent Achievements

One Parklea tutor noticed a Year 10 student who used to get stuck on trigonometry now working through multi-step sine and cosine rule problems with only minimal prompting, showing real independence compared to last term.

In another session, a high schooler who struggled to build analysis in English essays was able to outline and connect three key ideas for their Module A task after applying feedback from previous drafts—an encouraging shift toward self-driven revision.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who hesitated with fractions recently solved both addition and subtraction problems using different denominators without needing reminders, finishing the worksheet error-free.

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 Stanhope Garden Library/ Dennis Johnson Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Quakers Hill East Public School.