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Seacliff Park's tutors include a former school teacher with over a decade's classroom experience, a Master's-qualified early childhood and secondary educator, peer mentors and student activity facilitators, specialist STEM and English graduates, competition award-winners, experienced K–12 private tutors, university medallists, and accomplished youth coaches in both academic and creative pursuits.

Difan
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Difan

Economics Tutor Marion, SA
The most important things an economics tutor can do could be split into two parts. Academically, tutors are there to help the student to learn all the knowledge required for them to achieve better grades. Spiritually, tutors are there as mentors, which they need to encourage the student to achieve their full potential, because usually due to exam…
Amy
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Amy

Economics Tutor Glenelg South, SA
Teaching each individual the correct, efficient and effective learning process and be a friend My strengths are my knowledge base in mathematics and my ability to interact with fellow students, I am very patient and generous towards my students. My weaknesses are history and geography…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Andrea
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Andrea

Economics Tutor Daw Park, SA
I believe there are several things an economics tutor can deliver to her students, the primary of which is to instill a sense of confidence and can-do attitude among them. This means my role will not only limit to a tutor but also a mentor, guiding my students on multiple aspects of their academic path. As a seasoned tutor and teacher of English,…
Anusha
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Anusha

Economics Tutor Unley Park, SA
Make sure that the kid is able to communicate any challenges that they are facing and create a healthy and fostering environment that relies more on understanding and solving the problems rather than just covering the syllabus. The ability to make teaching and understanding stuff fun by collaborating key learning skills to activities so that kids…
Mason
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Mason

Economics Tutor Seacombe Gardens, SA
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to inspire their curiosity and desire for learning because it is their desire that will ultimately drive them to succeed. I think my strength as a tutor is my personality. I'm very kind, patient, and funny. I always find a way to make learning more…
David
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David

Economics Tutor Somerton Park, SA
A tutor should help a student foremost achieve the specific academic goals that they wish to attain; but the way in which they should do this is by inspiring a love of learning in the student. By achieving this dual function, you are more likely to attain success for short term results as well as success for the entirety of their academic careers.…
Veanna
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Veanna

Economics Tutor Bedford Park, SA
- communication, trust and team work. communication is not only important for the teaching aspect of tutoring but i would like my student to be confident enough in me such that they can voice out their doubts and concerns to me. trust is important in making sure that they are able to confide in me and team work because if they cooperate with me…
SantosH
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SantosH

Economics Tutor Glenelg East, SA
Give motivation and let them move forward. Well i was a child and i how how can child learn and what to make them enjoy reading. Well i only don’t focus in study i also focus in making things enjoyable and easy to learn.. Technical skills. Creativity. Empathy or kindness and experience. My greatest strength is attention to detail. I've always…
Maria
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Maria

Economics Tutor Forestville, SA
The important thing is to develop the student's ability to independently study. It is like that proverb 'Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.' There are going to be times where the student will find themselves in a position with an urgent question regarding their assignment which is…

Local Reviews

Isabella really enjoyed her first tutoring session , she said "I learnt more in this session then i have the whole semester".
Oonagh, Seacliff Park

Inside Seacliff ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Emily worked on expressing decimal numbers as **percentages and vice versa**, along with simplifying ratios and calculating percentages of given amounts.

For Year 9, Thomas practiced applying the **chain, product, and quotient rules in differentiation** to solve calculus problems involving equations of tangents and explored intervals where functions are increasing or decreasing using sign diagrams.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Jake focused on physics concepts like **projectile motion—breaking down velocity into horizontal and vertical components—and revised conservation of momentum** through targeted problem sets.

Recent Challenges

In Year 4 maths, one student repeatedly avoided showing working when subtracting decimals with exchanging, which made it difficult to spot calculation slips—"he tried to do it all in his head and lost track of the columns."

A Year 9 learner showed low motivation during revision for a fractions test, often skipping essential practice on fraction multiplication/division and relying heavily on calculators for harder questions rather than engaging with new methods.

In Year 12 physics, forgetting to list known variables before starting multi-step problems led to confusion over which formula to apply, resulting in wasted time searching for mistakes instead of progressing confidently.

Recent Achievements

One Seacliff Park tutor noticed Thomas, a senior high school student, now confidently chooses the correct differentiation rule—chain, product, or quotient—without prompts and applies them to complex functions, a real shift from earlier sessions where he'd hesitate and wait for guidance.

In another session, Stephen in Year 10 started checking his own calculations using the "check-back" method rather than relying on the tutor to spot mistakes; previously he'd skip this step entirely.

Meanwhile, Jye in primary school surprised his tutor by independently using word attack skills when reading unfamiliar words aloud—a change from last term's tendency to pause and look 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 Brighton Public Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Seacliff Primary School.