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Lysterfield's tutors include a seasoned RMIT university lecturer with decades of teaching, an ATAR 99.5 Scotch College scholar, a Nossal High Distinction maths competitor, primary specialists with education degrees and school leadership experience, Kumon and private academy instructors, a state-level athletics coach, and multiple accomplished mentors from selective schools and top universities.

YunSoo
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YunSoo

Economics Tutor Clayton, VIC
I think the most important thing an economics tutor should do is understand the learning pattern and style of the student. Every student learns differently, simply using one method is not enough. As I try to see, I try to understand how different students learn and understand different content. Through the process, i try to find what is the most…
Sahib
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Sahib

Economics Tutor Upper Ferntree Gully, VIC
I believe the key purpose of an economics tutor is not only to improve a students grades but also encourage intellectual curiosity. Due to the individuality of each student a personalised experience must be created by tutors, through adapting teaching methods and lesson plans, to stimulate the unique minds of students. Further tutors must…
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Ari
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Ari

Economics Tutor Scoresby, VIC
I think the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is build confidence. Sometime, all it takes is confidence for a student who is unsure about their abilities to really flourish. I'd say my strengths lie in being patient. Given I have recently graduated from highschool, it means I have a better understanding of what students…
Manvee
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Manvee

Economics Tutor Scoresby, VIC
*As an economics tutor most important thing is to understand the student and be friendly with the students .So that they can discuss there promblems easily without any hesitation. * As a tutor i should know about the level of the student and about the student in what ways he/she loves to learn because learning cannot be done with a force full…
Damanpreet
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Damanpreet

Economics Tutor Doveton, VIC
In my opinion, it would primarily be the ability to understand that each student is different and thus needs guidance to cater to their own unique set of skills. I believe my strength would be my inquisitiveness for more knowledge and learning and an attitude to learn while being open to exchange knowldge on the…
Ian
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Ian

Economics Tutor Doveton, VIC
I think the most important thing an economics tutor can do is build a student’s confidence and make learning feel achievable. A good tutor listens, adapts their approach to each learner, and helps students develop the skills and motivation to learn independently. I think my biggest strengths as a tutor come from my combined experience as a…
Yobin
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Yobin

Economics Tutor Noble Park North, VIC
I believe that the foremost quality that an economics tutor needs to have is patience and belief in the student's abilities. Often, the rewards of tutoring a reaped over a long period and not overnight. Our main responsibility is to instill the belief in our students that they are capable of succeeding in their studies. Improving their…
Rhea
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Rhea

Economics Tutor Glen Waverley, VIC
I think one of the most important things a tutor can do is help students believe in themselves. Sometimes they know more than they think—they just need someone to encourage them and show them they’re capable. And remind students that learning is a process. A tutor should focus on progress, not perfection, and celebrate the small wins along the…
Peter
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Peter

Economics Tutor Rowville, VIC
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student, not to just explain a certain problem but to help them understand the concept behind it, explain to them why they are doing it. Students need to be motivated, without motivation students lose the desire to learn. I feel that if students understand why they have to do it maths or English…
Qijia
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Qijia

Economics Tutor Knoxfield, VIC
I believe the most important thing for a tutor to do is to cultivate the interest and engagement of the students. In Chinese, there is an idiom that roughly translates to "Interest is the best teacher", by actively engaging the interests of students you make learning not a chore, but rather a joy. I believe that my biggest strength lies in my…
Liam
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Liam

Economics Tutor Dandenong North, VIC
To teach them in a way that they are equipped with the knowledge at a good pace for them, while also remaining up to date or a head of schedule. This allows them to have things mastered before their classes, allowing them to spend that time in the most effective way they see fit. My strengths as a tutor are the ability to lead a student to an…
Kenan
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Kenan

Economics Tutor Dandenong, VIC
1. Build a strong personal relationship with the student to create the optimal learning environment where the student is comfortable to communicate as he wants with the tutor 2. A tutor can provide a rubric(concepts/ideas simplified into bullet points) and summarized notes so students can combat any questions asked 3. Set out goals for the…
Hriday
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Hriday

Economics Tutor Dandenong, VIC
The most important things that I can do: Encourages self-paced and self-directed learning With tutoring, your child will learn to take the initiative his or her school work. Your child will also learn how to control the learning pace. Improves self-esteem and confidence Your child’s self-esteem and confidence will increase through…

Local Reviews

I am absolutely thrilled with Hayden's performance as a tutor for my daughter. His questioning techniques are wonderful with encouraging my daughter to think more deeply about what she is learning. My daughter is feeling more confident with her mathematical problem solving skills now.
Sharon, Lysterfield

Inside LysterfieldTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Sahas worked on division using grouping with visual aids, and also practiced converting mixed fractions to improper fractions.

Year 8 student Luan focused on graphing linear equations by finding gradients and intercepts from algebraic expressions, along with revising how to solve equations involving positive and negative integers.

Meanwhile, Year 9 student Oliver tackled trigonometry for finding missing lengths and angles, as well as reviewing bearings and elevation problems in worded contexts.

Recent Challenges

Messy written work and lack of neat layout have repeatedly affected accuracy in Years 7–10, especially when working through long division or algebraic expansions—"reminding Ollie to keep calculations neat, and in correct columns to minimise mistakes" was a consistent note.

In Year 8 trigonometry, formula selection sometimes stalled progress until prompted by the tutor.

Several primary and lower secondary students avoided tackling harder worded questions or focused only on familiar times tables, making it difficult to transfer skills to new problem types; for example, one student struggled with converting word problems into equations during algebra revision.

When focus wavered, exercises often went unfinished.

Recent Achievements

A Lysterfield tutoring session saw one high school student, Ollie, move from making frequent mistakes with algebraic fractions to accurately solving balance method equations after targeted revision—he now checks each step carefully, something he often skipped before.

Another tutor noted that Luan, who previously struggled to focus and hesitated with negative integers, was able to complete all the adding exercises independently using counters and number lines.

For a younger student, Sahas, lessons using iPad visuals have paid off; where he once lost his place during division problems, he now stays engaged and can solve division by 3 and 5 using grouping pictures without reminders.

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 Ferntree Gully Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Lysterfield Primary School.