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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit Guarantee
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Guarantee

Trigg's tutors feature a former specialist school music teacher with five years' classroom and private tutoring experience, a Kumon tutor and choir musician, an ATAR 98.3 achiever with high school mentoring background, an engineering student who's coached Auskick children, a data analyst with a maths degree, and educators skilled in creative writing, childcare, and peer support.

Cody
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Cody

Economics Tutor Darch, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are to: 1 - place a focus on topics the student is struggling with 2 - teach these topics in a way that is different from what they are being taught in class. From a basic principles foundation and adding complexity as the student understands the topic more. I am currently a 3rd-year…
Ashley
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Ashley

Economics Tutor Jolimont, WA
It is important to motivate them and help them understand the importance of scoring well. This allows them to choose their education and career path earlier on. It is also important to be their friend and listen to what they have to say, to acknowledge and validate their thoughts and opinions. This makes them a better critical thinker. I am…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

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Local Reviews

Dung was an absolutely amazing tutor, Kai enjoyed his weekly visits and his grades had improved.
Tara, Carine

Inside TriggTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Paige focused on converting fractions to decimals and percentages, as well as multiplying numbers with decimals using step-by-step examples.

For Year 10, Benji worked through finding equations of linear graphs and explored the relationships between parallel and perpendicular lines by calculating midpoints and segment lengths.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student James tackled more advanced compound interest problems involving non-annual compounding, and revisited key concepts in surds for deeper understanding.

Recent Challenges

A Year 11 student did not complete assigned homework on finding midpoints and distinguishing non-linear correlation, which limited their readiness for new material.

In Year 9, messy working—such as skipping writing out equations—meant errors in rearranging trigonometric equations were harder to spot; as one tutor observed, "he didn't write down the equations and didn't understand them fully."

A Year 6 student avoided practice with fraction-to-percent conversions, preferring easier multiplication drills instead.

Meanwhile, a senior student became flustered during wordy probability questions, hesitating after misreading key phrases like "at least"—leading to repeated confusion in tree diagrams.

Recent Achievements

A Trigg tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who had previously struggled with rearranging equations finally grasp the process of cross multiplication, now able to solve these independently after needing reminders in earlier sessions.

Another high schooler showed a real shift by bringing all her past homework and test results to lessons, demonstrating initiative and a new willingness to review mistakes—something she used to avoid.

Meanwhile, a younger student made clear progress by reciting most of the four times table at a reasonable speed for the first time, after weeks of hesitancy with recall.

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 Karrinyup Public Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Mary's Anglican Girls' School.