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Attwood's tutors include a university-level lecturer and coding competition leader with 200+ hours mentoring, a Melbourne High Harvard Book Prize recipient and camp mentor, an academic awards-winning Biomedicine student on the Dean's Honours List, experienced school peer mentors, VCE subject dux achievers, and primary classroom assistants dedicated to K–12 student support.

Muhammad
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Muhammad

Economics Tutor Glenroy, VIC
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to stay patient with him or her when they are not able get hold of a concept. That is what differentiates a great teacher from a good teacher. Students need to make mistakes in order to learn and it is responsibility of the teacher to stay patient while they are making mistakes…
Kallan
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Kallan

Economics Tutor Essendon West, VIC
Adapt. I think every student is different, and this you need to find ways to communicate to different people Bring really clear and rational. I think it's important to be calm, not get flustered if someone isn't picking something…
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Viet
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Viet

Economics Tutor Broadmeadows, VIC
Being able to teach and communicate in a way that makes it seem that you are more approachable. Being able to make the student comfortable in the learning environment. Being patient. Understand that all students learn at different rates, which is dependent on their background knowledge as well as their individual approach to learning. Posses…
Layba
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Layba

Economics Tutor Meadow Heights, VIC
I believe that one of the most important things an economics tutor can do is to build up a strong connection with him/ her, so that tutor is able to understand a child fully which will further help that student in improving grades and groom his/ her personality too. My core strength is making my work my passion and give my best in all possible…
Robert
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Robert

Economics Tutor Keilor Park, VIC
the most important thing for an economics tutor to do for the student is to connect with the student develop some sort of bond with the student so the student can trust and understand what the tutor is teaching them, also its important that the tutor not rush with the student and the tutor helps develop the students confidence in approaching the…
callum
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callum

Economics Tutor Pascoe Vale, VIC
The most important thing an economics tutor can do with a student is give them confidence in their abilities and a growth mindset. Teaching students material is important, but spoonfeeding them leads to boredom, dissatisfaction, and poor results when tests ask complicated questions. By listening, offering encouragement, and being careful about…
Koray
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Koray

Economics Tutor Kealba, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to always be available - whether that is in real life or on the phone. I believe it is very important for a tutor to readily respond to student questions even when not tutoring. This will allow the student to progress even further in their studies and achieve great results. I believe my…
Damien
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Damien

Economics Tutor Taylors Lakes, VIC
One of the most important things a teacher can do for their student is to listen. Not to listen to think of the next response but to listen to understand. I believe as a teacher listening specifically to WHAT the student is asking not HOW they are asking it is one of the most valuable and important skills I've learned to develop. When a student is…
Zara
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Zara

Economics Tutor Essendon, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is encourage a love for learning. By providing a safe learning space, it is imperative that a tutor encourages their students to ask questions and to be inquisitive, as this means the students will approach learning with an open mindset rather than a closed one. Furthermore, it is important…

Local Reviews

Gurjot has been great and Ella is feeling a great deal more positive already.
Lisa, Greenvale

Inside AttwoodTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Alex focused on probability and fractions from Chapter 7, using practical examples to reinforce key fraction skills.

In Year 9, Maya worked through angle relationships and properties of geometrical figures, including a review of angles and practice with geometric diagrams.

For Year 11, Adam tackled language analysis by revising persuasive techniques, annotating articles, and practicing how to write effective analytical responses based on recent feedback.

Recent Challenges

A Year 12 student arrived at a lesson without their book, making it impossible to reference key texts or annotate effectively ("would have been beneficial if his books were brought to the lesson").

In Year 10, one student had not completed assigned homework before the next session, which slowed progress in mastering persuasive techniques.

A Year 8 learner was often distracted by unrelated topics and missed opportunities to direct their learning.

A primary school student continued relying on finger counting for multiplication instead of practicing recall—this delayed fluency during more complex fraction tasks and led to slower problem-solving in class.

Recent Achievements

An Attwood tutor noticed Marcus, a Year 8 student, shift from guessing to explaining his reasoning out loud while solving coordinate geometry problems—he now confidently maps points and talks through each step.

In Year 11 English, one student arrived having already annotated The Longest Memory and was able to link quotes across texts without prompting, showing new independence with comparative analysis.

Another high schooler took feedback on her oral presentation draft, pinpointed exactly where she needed to clarify ideas, and came back the next lesson with a revised outline ready for discussion.

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 Gladstone Park Community Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Westmeadows Primary School.