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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Kallaroo's tutors include a former high school maths and science teacher with a Bachelor of Education, a PhD engineer who established a Centre of Excellence for Maths and Science, an ATAR 99.75 Dux, state-level subject award winners, experienced private tutors for all ages, peer mentors, youth leaders, and passionate STEM university students with competition success.

Andrew
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Andrew

Economics Tutor Burns Beach, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student would be to support them academically and emotionally/mentally. The main aim of tutoring is to further their skills in the given area of school, but it isn't always that straight forward especially when dealing with diverse students. Understanding how they are doing emotionally and mentally is…
Hanna
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Hanna

Economics Tutor Warwick, WA
1. Tutor have to understand well what the material is to teach. 2. Tutor have to find a suitable ways to tell to the children 3. Tutor have to understand what student need to learn and make it simple! I like to share... I like to give something useful knowladge for child growth. I like to teach not just theoretical, also practice and good…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

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…
Shekin
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Shekin

Economics Tutor Darch, WA
I think the most important thing a tutor can do is to make the student more confident in themselves which motivates them in their studies so they succeed. I have seen in a personal level how badly confidence can affect someone in their studies. You start doubting yourself and think you are horrible at a subject. This leads to the person to not…
Oshadhi
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Oshadhi

Economics Tutor Tapping, WA
To Mold their Lives, Teach them Right and wrong along with Morals. No Knowledge will matter if the child doesn't end up being good human being, a Good citizen I understand subject matter in a different way, in a deductive manner. From the students I have taught they understand that manner easily. I have patients, that i do not mind teaching the…
Chelsea
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Chelsea

Economics Tutor Darch, WA
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make the contents digestible and understand how their students learn. Everyone has different learning styles and a tutor should be aware of how their students learn and use this to teach the content better, to enable the students understand the content and not just remember it. My…
Sarah
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Sarah

Economics Tutor Gwelup, WA
Give them the resources to be their best student. Rather than just giving them the answer outright, set up a pathway for them to solve their problem themselves. I'm a very patient person, I think I've learned from past 'bad' tutors that patience is key to the student enjoying the session. I also consider myself to be creative with solutions if the…

Local Reviews

We have been so pleased with the tutoring provided by Selena. Selena helped my daughter go from a D grade to a high C in a very short time frame. Thank you Selena.
Kylie

Inside KallarooTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Isla focused on converting between fractions and decimals as well as adding fractions, using visual aids to clarify each step.

In Year 8, Ethan worked through integer operations with negative numbers and practised order of operations, also touching on mixed and reciprocal fractions.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Sophie reviewed consumer arithmetic by revisiting investment problems and interest calculations, then applied her understanding to currency exchange scenarios.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student struggled to keep organised notes before a test, making revision less effective—"needs to refine his notes for tests."

In Year 12, one learner found it difficult to manage time and plan for assessments, which left them feeling unprepared.

For a Year 8 student, jumping straight into GATE-style questions without breaking them down led to confusion and incomplete answers.

Meanwhile, in Year 6 maths, avoiding writing out working steps meant mistakes weren't easily spotted or corrected.

These habits often resulted in wasted effort or missed learning opportunities at crucial moments.

Recent Achievements

One Kallaroo tutoring session saw a Year 11 student finally tackle consumer arithmetic questions she'd previously avoided, showing new independence by setting up multi-step problems without prompting.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 student who used to guess at algebraic fractions now confidently explains her reasoning aloud and consistently checks her own work for errors.

In primary, one Year 4 student made a noticeable shift—after struggling with division remainders in homework, he asked the tutor to review it together and then solved long division questions on his own, finishing all ten problems without needing help.

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