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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Raby's tutors include a UK-trained teacher with 8 years' classroom and leadership experience, a National Maths Competition distinction achiever, an IGCSE O-Level top scorer and debate finalist, seasoned K–12 maths and science tutors, peer mentoring awardees, and university scholars in medical science, quantum engineering, linguistics, and mathematics.

Jaleesa Kyla Mendoza
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Jaleesa Kyla Mendoza

Economics Tutor Oran Park, NSW
To be able to build up the student’s confidence and self esteem. I am patient and…
Sahil
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Sahil

Economics Tutor Macquarie Fields, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do is provide regular feedback to the student, in order to help identify mistakes and improve their understanding. Providing feedback regularly allows for faster development and makes it easier for the student to understand difficult concepts. My strengths include being enthusiastic while teaching hence…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Nicholas
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Nicholas

Economics Tutor Macquarie Fields, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is make them feel more confident and comfortable with a subject. I believe this to be true as being more confident and comfortable with subjects often leads to more voluntary studying out of passion, and subsequently a deeper grasp of the content themselves. As a tutor, my strengths are the…
Timothy
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Timothy

Economics Tutor Macquarie Fields, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for the student are ensuring that the student is able to achieve their highest potential in the certain subject, teach them important skills that they can use throughout life and form long lasting relationships with the student. Furthermore, the tutor must continually support the student and ensure the…
Aishani
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Aishani

Economics Tutor Prestons, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for the student is believe in the student and motivate the student to learn and achieve their maximum potential. This is then followed by providing knowledge and making sure that the student understands most of the content to be able to gain maximum understanding of the topics. My strengths as a tutor is…

Local Reviews

Experience was great, the tutor Neetu, is absolutely wonderful young lady. My son is so happy. Is is usually a shy boy who needs some time to get use to new people, but with Neetu, he automatically clicked, so ima extremely happy.
Natasa Branezac, Raby

Inside RabyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Josh worked on addition and subtraction strategies alongside tackling basic multiplication and division, including simple inequalities.

In Year 9, Lily focused on solving linear equations—finding gradients, intercepts, and equations of straight lines—and explored the relationships between parallel and perpendicular lines.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Marcus practiced applying trigonometric ratios (sin, cos, tan) to solve for unknown angles and sides in right-angled triangles, with extra time spent revising bearings and types of triangles using diagrams.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student working on algebra and trigonometry struggled to keep track of sign changes in multi-step problems—"careless errors kept reappearing where signs were flipped mid-way," a tutor noted.

In Year 10 science, one student found it challenging to use the data from graphs when answering analysis questions, often missing marks for not referencing numbers directly.

Meanwhile, a senior maths student relied heavily on calculator inputs during complex quadratic work but made repeated mistakes entering formulas, leading to confusion about which step had gone wrong. This slowed progress and left key gaps unaddressed heading into assessments.

Recent Achievements

One Raby tutor noted a Year 11 student who, after initially struggling to connect physics concepts with real-world examples, was able to explain Newton's force equation in his own words and apply it to compare forces between different objects—something he hesitated to do previously.

In a recent high school maths session, a student who used to wait for hints started talking through her geometry problem-solving process out loud, demonstrating more independent reasoning.

Meanwhile, a younger student who often guessed days of the week now confidently recites them without prompting and has begun correcting herself when she makes mistakes.

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 Greg Percival Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Kearns Public School.