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Tallebudgera's tutors include a former international school teacher with a Master of Teaching, an experienced K–12 science and maths educator with a medical science background, a seasoned early years specialist, a peer mentoring program founder and academic award-winner, high-achieving university students in medicine and engineering, and primary experts with postgraduate qualifications.

Steven
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Steven

Economics Tutor Robina, QLD
Effective tutors are flexible and adaptable, tailoring their teaching methods to suit the student's learning style. They may use visual aids, hands-on activities, or other approaches to enhance understanding. - Vast knowledge base - Patient and meticulous - Customized learning - Adapt to various learning styles and…
Harriet
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Harriet

Economics Tutor Robina, QLD
Help them understand what they couldn't before and not ridicule them for not understanding a topic I'm very patient and clear at explaining how to do something and why it…
1st Lesson Trial

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Rakan Nabil
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Rakan Nabil

Economics Tutor Burleigh Waters, QLD
The most important things an economics tutor can do for a student are to provide clear explanations, offer patience and encouragement, tailor teaching methods to individual learning styles, foster a supportive learning environment, and instill confidence in the student's abilities. Additionally, actively listening to the student's concerns and…
Darshana
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Darshana

Economics Tutor Varsity Lakes, QLD
Te most important things an economics tutor can do for a student are provide academic guidance, human connection, and consistency, and the combination of these factors can potentially reinvent a class, subject, or school more broadly for a young learner. - Patience - Adaptability - Enthusiasm - Empathy -…
Luke
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Luke

Economics Tutor Burleigh Heads, QLD
I consider passion to be the most important characteristic of an economics tutor. This is because a high level of passion ensures a tutor excels and thrives in any condition, thus enabling a tutor to help any kind of student in any difficult situation. My main strengths are my communication and academic skills. Informal tutoring taught me the…
Cameron
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Cameron

Economics Tutor Mudgeeraba, QLD
The most important aspect of tutoring is making learning enjoyable! I achieve this though understanding unique learning patterns and teaching specific effective study habits and processes which reduce the stresses and anxiety which are all too commonly associated with exams and assignment deadlines. Once developed, these skills are applicable well…
Reshma Gowda
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Reshma Gowda

Economics Tutor Burleigh Heads, QLD
They must be able to explain complicated concepts in a way that makes sense to their students and must be able to do so in a way that inspires their student want to engage in what they are doing. Align with parents and student. Uncover learning styles, build confidence in students, improve student study skills and be compassionate and build…
Lawrence
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Lawrence

Economics Tutor Robina, QLD
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to provide support, encouragement and a positive learning environment. I find that tutoring is most effective, when the pupil willing to learn, and the best way to do that is by making maths engaging rather than frustrating. My strengths as a tutor would be my patience and my…
Eliza
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Eliza

Economics Tutor Clear Island Waters, QLD
Listen. Always listen. Be empathetic and kind. I have a history as a children's entertainer, as well as experience in speech and drama so can made lessons…
Audrey
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Audrey

Economics Tutor Robina, QLD
I believe that one of the most important things an economics tutor can do for a student is adapt and personalise the way they teach and explain things to suit the individual needs of a student, whilst maintaining high levels of patience and understanding. I believe that my strengths as a tutor include my ability to offer multiple ways/processes of…

Local Reviews

Very happy . 5 Stars
Lisa

Inside TallebudgeraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Bella worked on comparing percentages and identifying simple subjects or predicates in sentences, using targeted worksheets for practice.

In Year 9, Jeremy reviewed Pythagoras' theorem and practiced applying it to right-angled triangle problems, as well as working through exam-style measurement questions involving perimeter, area, and volume.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Jacob focused on the binomial distribution—learning both the probability formulas and calculator functions (pdf/cdf)—and applied these to discrete probability scenarios relevant to his Maths Methods coursework.

Recent Challenges

In Year 9 Maths, one student arrived without essential materials—"only reason why this wasn't achieved was because [she] did not have paper to do the calculations"—which stalled progress on area problems.

In Year 11 General Maths, another struggled with formatting working clearly and over-relied on quick estimates for unit conversions rather than methodical steps.

A Year 8 English student avoided editing her PowerPoint for spelling and layout, impacting communication of ideas.

Meanwhile, in a senior exam setting, difficulty justifying answers stemmed from skipping revision tasks set between lessons. Missed opportunities to take up feedback or revise as advised meant confusion persisted into new topics.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Tallebudgera noticed that Jeremy, a high school student who once hesitated with algebra and trigonometry, now independently solves most problems and quickly recognises when he's made an error—something he rarely caught before.

Willow, also in high school, used to get stuck on fraction conversions but recently completed a Year 7 worksheet without needing reminders about the process.

In primary years, Bella has started asking for extra homework on her own initiative and now rereads her writing to check for grammar mistakes, rather than rushing through tasks as she did previously.

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 Elanora Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Tallebudgera State School.