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Tutors in Research include a University of Melbourne-trained primary school teacher and learning diversity leader, an Eltham High School dux with ATAR 99.50 and choir director experience, Kumon maths and English specialists, veteran secondary maths teachers from international schools, peer mentors with science degrees, and award-winning high-achievers passionate about helping students thrive.

Harrison
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Harrison

Economics Tutor North Warrandyte, VIC
Primarily would be encouragement given how stressful year 12 can be, students need support. Additionally, understanding and patience will I was a house captain at my school, which meant working with much younger students to foster participation and encouragement, which I could provide as a tutor. Further, my general interest in maths and…
Daniel (Jiamu)
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Daniel (Jiamu)

Economics Tutor Templestowe, VIC
Building a supportive relationship, fostering a positive learning environment, and helping the student develop effective study habits are the most important things an economics tutor can do for a student. I am patient, adaptable, and attuned. I believe in fostering a supportive and encouraging environment to build confidence and…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Peter
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Peter

Economics Tutor Watsonia, VIC
Gaining a sense of self. Self-respect. Self-confidence. Self-esteem. These seem to help learning. I rarely teach. I prefer asking questions and letting the student discover the…
Insith
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Insith

Economics Tutor Watsonia North, VIC
I think the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is helping the student believe in themselves and letting them know they can do well. This is because most of the time students self doubts leads to them struggling with content not a lack of ability. I create strategies to help my students remember content easier and I make…
Shruti
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Shruti

Economics Tutor Watsonia North, VIC
I think the most important things an economics tutor can do are build a student’s confidence, encourage independent thinking, and create a positive learning environment. A tutor shouldn’t just give answers but should guide students through the thinking process so they can solve problems on their own. One of my main strength is patience. I…
Chau
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Chau

Economics Tutor Watsonia North, VIC
The most important thing an economics tutor can do is to not give up on the student. While it is rewarding when students improve, some can take a while before they can overcome their learning curve. It is important to be patient and work together as a team to help them achieve better results. I try to think outside the box and tailor my lessons to…
Grant
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Grant

Economics Tutor Eltham, VIC
The primary outcome is to help a student learn how to organise themselves to study and learn alone and then to love learning new information and fully develop a life long learning habit. I have the ability to make complex issues understandable and can use colourful language and examples to turn a light…
Eddie
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Eddie

Economics Tutor Templestowe, VIC
For a student, the worst thing an economics tutor can do is to strike fear into them about their progress or their work. I consider a tutor's job to support the student in every way: academically, physically, and psychologically. The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to provide them with realistic hopes: to stand from our…
Mary Melicia
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Mary Melicia

Economics Tutor Watsonia North, VIC
The fact that knowledge is power and I help them gain the necessary knowledge which gives them courage and power makes me happy. Patience and the ability to find new ways to make the lessons interesting and…
Henry
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Henry

Economics Tutor Doncaster, VIC
I believe the most important thing a tutor can and should do for a student is to be adaptable to their circumstances and learning style. Each student is different, and a tutor should be ready to change their teaching style to suit the students needs to facilitate the student's development. This gives the student the best chance to succeed. I…
Bo
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Bo

Economics Tutor Donvale, VIC
Help them understand something. Adapt to students; builds rapport; knowing how to learn efficiently in my own…

Local Reviews

Anthony is lovely and the work he does with Ethan is great.
Natalie, Eltham

Inside ResearchTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 11 student Ethan revised exponents and logarithms through practice exam questions, identifying a few challenging areas for further review.

Another Year 11 student, Sarah, focused on factorising polynomials and completing the square to find turning points, including using the turning point formula with worked examples.

Meanwhile, Year 5 student Oliver built confidence with subtraction algorithms and times tables, using step-by-step breakdowns to reinforce foundational skills.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8, a student continued to forget key positive/negative signs in algebra, which slowed progress on x-intercepts—"little stuff that adds up," as one tutor noted.

In Year 11 Methods, another struggled to keep up after busy weeks and was "behind due to recent busy weeks, isn't as familiar with the ideas."

A senior student's revision remained surface-level: he reviewed past exams but did not focus on problematic questions or note-taking habits, so small errors persisted in probability and surds.

After setbacks, motivation dipped noticeably for a Year 10 learner who said he'd "catch up," but avoided regular review sessions.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Research recently noticed Gabriel, a Year 11 student, quickly mastering CAS calculator shortcuts for graphing polynomials—something he'd hesitated with before—which let him work through graph sketching far more independently.

In another session, Otis (Year 12) tackled two of his most challenging exam questions and showed a new willingness to attempt problems under timed conditions, finishing most within the set period instead of getting stuck like in previous tries.

Meanwhile, Isaac (Year 3) now answers questions on his 1, 2, 5, and 10 times tables almost instantly after weeks of needing reminders; last session he recited them all without 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 Eltham Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Research Primary School.