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Sherbrooke's tutors include veteran classroom teachers with postgraduate education credentials, an eight-year secondary maths and science specialist, multiple peer mentors and school captains, ATAR 98+ and subject award recipients, national competition semi-finalists, music instructors, and experienced private tutors—each bringing impressive academic results, leadership experience, and a passion for working with K–12 students.

Samuel
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Samuel

Economics Tutor Upwey, VIC
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to be a role model. Someone who can sympathise with the difficulties and experiences of a student and can give them effective strategies for personal development to set them ahead. Understanding goes a long way in furthering trust and academic confidence for a student. Asking them…
Sahib
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Sahib

Economics Tutor Upper Ferntree Gully, VIC
I believe the key purpose of an economics tutor is not only to improve a students grades but also encourage intellectual curiosity. Due to the individuality of each student a personalised experience must be created by tutors, through adapting teaching methods and lesson plans, to stimulate the unique minds of students. Further tutors must…
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YunSoo
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YunSoo

Economics Tutor Clayton, VIC
I think the most important thing an economics tutor should do is understand the learning pattern and style of the student. Every student learns differently, simply using one method is not enough. As I try to see, I try to understand how different students learn and understand different content. Through the process, i try to find what is the most…
Ishita
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Ishita

Economics Tutor Upper Ferntree Gully, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to guide them instead of doing the work for them. It is important for the students to feel that they have control over what they are learning and for them to be encouraged through feedback and practice. I am a very patient, determined and creative person. I can understand what a student…
Charli
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Charli

Economics Tutor Ferntree Gully, VIC
Listen to the students and there needs. Also communicating clearly the topics students want help with and not avoiding or judging the student when they need extra help I\'ve always found it easy to explain in another way a topic that might be considered…
Qijia
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Qijia

Economics Tutor Knoxfield, VIC
I believe the most important thing for a tutor to do is to cultivate the interest and engagement of the students. In Chinese, there is an idiom that roughly translates to "Interest is the best teacher", by actively engaging the interests of students you make learning not a chore, but rather a joy. I believe that my biggest strength lies in my…

Local Reviews

Reshveny is on time, reliable and enthusiastic. Sienna's recent results from her maths test were quite good. Keep up the good work!
Arna

Inside SherbrookeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Daniel practiced multi-digit addition and subtraction, worked on area and perimeter, and later focused on building speed with times tables using flashcards.

In Year 9, Vien prepared arguments for a practice essay and started planning for an upcoming SAC by refining how to reword sentences concisely.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Isaac tackled factorising techniques like the difference of perfect squares and grouping method, and reviewed algebraic fractions during test revision.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 English, one student's handwriting and essay structure made it difficult to communicate ideas clearly—"his handwriting is difficult to read," noted the tutor, which slowed both reading and writing tasks.

In Year 11 Maths, a lack of regular practice led to "struggling to recognise which techniques to use in different questions" under test conditions.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student avoided harder geometry problems and preferred repeating familiar work; this meant less exposure to new concepts.

During VCE English prep, another student hesitated to revise drafts after feedback, leaving recurring grammar issues unaddressed before assessments.

Recent Achievements

One Sherbrooke tutor saw a Year 8 student, Vien, shift from passively listening to actively proofreading his own paragraphs and clearly explaining what he'd changed—a big step up from earlier sessions where he hesitated to edit.

In senior English, Tasia recently started setting her own goals for VCE essay writing and is now independently linking arguments with supporting quotes, something she found overwhelming last term.

Meanwhile, Daniel in Year 5 began volunteering answers even when unsure; last week he finished a set of multi-digit multiplication problems on his own after previously needing frequent reassurance.

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 Belgrave Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Kallista Primary School.