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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Wilson's tutors include an 8-year veteran maths teacher, a secondary science and maths specialist with a Master's and B.Ed, university-level teaching assistants, academic peer mentors, and volunteer youth coaches—plus scholarship winners, Olympiad achievers, and engineers who have guided K–12 students in maths, English, coding, and more.

Siddhartha
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Siddhartha

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student are fostering a positive and supportive learning environment, tailoring their teaching to the student's unique needs, and building the student’s confidence. By providing clear explanations, encouragement, and strategies for independent learning, a tutor empowers students to reach their full…
Abbey
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Abbey

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
I think the most important thing is to build their confidence. I know it can be challenging to be learning new concepts at school and not understand them, so I would make my students feel comfortable in coming to me with any questions no matter how small or large they are, to make themselves feel confident in their own abilities and learning…
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Matt
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Matt

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
The most important part of being a tutor is to provide support. I gain trust with my students by showing them that I am there to support them fully. I engage with them one on one and ensure that there is truly no question 'too stupid' that they cannot ask me for help with. I find over time how the student personally learns and work with their own…
Mehardeep
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Mehardeep

Economics Tutor Crawley, WA
Listening is the most important thing a tutor can do for the student. Tutors cannot understand a student's requirements and expectations until they effectively give time to the student for communicating the same. However, listening alone does not suffice. A tutor must act on these requirements and prepare custom learning plans. Being someone who…

Local Reviews

Kiera is great. Isayla enjoying learning, so going well.
Leila, Waterford

Inside WilsonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Sofia worked through perimeter and area of 2D shapes, along with converting metric lengths using practical measurement examples.

In Year 9, James tackled simultaneous equations and explored trigonometric functions, applying these to problem-solving tasks.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Emily focused on binomial expansion and quadratic equations, practising step-by-step algebraic techniques to build confidence for upcoming assessments.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student showed progress in algebra assignments but tended to rely on memory for formulas rather than using the provided formula sheet—"I have corrected him about it," the tutor noted, which previously led to avoidable mistakes.

In Year 11, one student's confidence remained low despite solid understanding; hesitation to attempt questions slowed test practice and sometimes caused second-guessing.

Meanwhile, a Year 5 student struggled with differentiating addition and subtraction symbols, often pausing mid-task for clarification.

Occasional distractions during tutorials, especially for Year 8s, meant extra time was spent regaining focus instead of moving forward with new content.

Recent Achievements

One Wilson tutor noticed a Year 9 student who had been hesitant to ask for help now starting sessions by bringing up questions from class, a shift from his earlier habit of staying quiet when stuck.

In Year 11, another student previously struggled with dividing ratios but, after some guided practice, was able to explain the process back and complete several problems independently.

A younger primary student who found adding and subtracting numbers confusing last term now volunteers to solve examples on her own during lessons and has begun completing similar homework tasks 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 Riverton Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Wilson Primary School.