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Tutors in Delahey include a College Dux and Valedictorian (ATAR 98.60) with years of mentoring, a veteran Year 11–12 maths/science teacher and learning support officer, a Master of Engineering prizewinner and peer mentor, Kumon-trained tutors with education degrees, seasoned private tutors in maths and sciences, plus leaders in youth coaching and STEM outreach.

Blessing
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Blessing

Economics Tutor St Albans, VIC
Make the student not just do well in the subject but making the love the subject and have a good understanding of the subject, which will lead to achieving desired results. I am patient, and take my time to evaluate the best teaching method that works with each student individually. I prepare well for my tutorials. I am easy and free to talk…
Tanvi
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Tanvi

Economics Tutor Caroline Springs, VIC
Involvement of the student . If an economics tutor or a teacher is not able to make his/her student involved and self motivated to study then the whole effort as well as time of both teacher and student go waiste. I try to put my efforts as a mentor wholeheartedly to make my students clear about the concepts and put more emphasis on quality not…
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Duc Kiet
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Duc Kiet

Economics Tutor Derrimut, VIC
For me, the most important thing an economics tutor can do is help a student build confidence in themselves. Once they feel supported and encouraged, they are much more open to learning. A tutor should also guide students toward becoming independent learners by showing them strategies for problem solving and critical thinking, so they feel…
Hasan Mohammad Abdul
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Hasan Mohammad Abdul

Economics Tutor Sunshine West, VIC
The most important things an economics tutor can do for a student are to foster a supportive and encouraging learning environment, tailor their teaching approach to meet the student's individual needs, and build the student's confidence in their abilities. Additionally, a tutor should provide clear explanations, offer constructive feedback, and…
Damien
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Damien

Economics Tutor Keilor Downs, 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…
Robert
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Robert

Economics Tutor Keilor, 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…
Selam
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Selam

Economics Tutor Deer Park, VIC
Be creative and flexible with learning styles, building relationships, being patient and good listener. I have the ability to establish a strong trust and rapport with students. I strive to create a supporting and encouraging environment for students. I have the ability to teach students in a playful way. I'm very loving and…
Sang
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Sang

Economics Tutor Deer Park, VIC
The most important things a tutor can do are supporting the student's understanding, building their confidence, and encouraging independent thought. An effective tutor doesn't just give answers but teaches students how to figure things out for themselves and how to think. It is also important to listen and react to the student's needs so that the…
Henry
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Henry

Economics Tutor Sunshine North, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to provide them a pillar of support especially in times that they are confused and stressed. If a tutor isn’t able to actively aid a student in their studies and providing them reassurance that their hard-work will eventually pay off, I feel like as a tutor, you’ve failed your part.…
Viet
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Viet

Economics Tutor Sunshine West, 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…
Clarissa
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Clarissa

Economics Tutor Avondale Heights, VIC
As a tutor, I believe that the most important thing to do for a student is to find a way to explain concepts until it is finally able to "click" with students. Every individual has different experiences and skill levels, especially in a subject like mathematics. Thus, sometimes it is important to approach the same concept from different…

Local Reviews

James seems to be grasping what David is teaching him. He is very comfortable with David.
Peter, Hillside

Inside DelaheyTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Evangeline practised identifying and drawing different types of angles before beginning algebra basics, focusing on using clear working for each step.

For Year 9, Jessica worked through trigonometry applications including Sine and Cosine Rules and interpreting the unit circle.

Meanwhile, a Year 11 student revised operations with complex numbers—such as finding conjugates—and solved quadratic equations involving complex solutions.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student's notes in algebra and index laws were often messy or incomplete, which made reviewing mistakes difficult—one tutor commented, "I left one of my old exercise books with him to show how I took notes."

In Year 7 maths, forgetting the exercise book or not bringing textbooks meant extra lesson time was spent improvising rather than consolidating skills.

A recurring pattern in senior physics was only backchecking answers when prompted; this slowed test preparation and led to repeated calculation errors during practice.

In each case, missing homework or untidy written work directly limited progress in class and at home.

Recent Achievements

One Delahey tutoring session saw a Year 7 student, Evangeline, who had previously hesitated to write her own notes, independently prepare a summary sheet for an upcoming test and explain each point in her own words.

Meanwhile, Kristian in Year 10 began using a new exercise book as suggested by his tutor—dividing it for notes and practice problems—and has kept up this organised approach during the holidays instead of putting maths aside.

Another high schooler started catching their own calculation errors out loud before the tutor could step in, a shift from earlier sessions where mistakes would go unnoticed.

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