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Scarborough's tutors include a Kumon instructor and tennis pennant champion, a primary education university student with coaching experience, an academic tutor with a 97.8 ATAR, a specialist music teacher and private tutor, an engineering honours student awarded for maths and physics, plus high-achieving peer mentors in leadership and STEM competitions.

Sameed Bin
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Sameed Bin

Economics Tutor Yokine, WA
Ultimately, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are provided 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. Creativity and enthusiasm for teaching. Ability to explain complex things. Ability to…
Thomas
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Thomas

Economics Tutor Mount Claremont, WA
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to build confidence gradually and encourage active thinking. One way to improve academic confidence is to provide realistic goals and highlight progress and also normalise mistakes as part of leaning. It is also important for a tutor to guide a student to discover answers and praise effort…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Chamali
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Chamali

Economics Tutor Claremont, WA
-Increase a student's confidence about a particular subject -Help a student to improve their grades -I have good communication skills -I am a very approachable person -I am a patient person -I am also very friendly and…
Oliver
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Oliver

Economics Tutor Swanbourne, WA
If I had to simplify in one word it would be listening. Listening, I would argue, is without a doubt the most important thing a tutor can do for a student. Force feeding infomation to a student who feels they have no say would be unhelpful. It is of upmost importance that the tutor listens to the student, recognises where work needs to be done and…
Kushil
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Kushil

Economics Tutor Kingsley, WA
- Be prepared for all sessions - Be on time for all sessions - Communicate in a friendly manner with students so that they feel relaxed and able to concentrate for the time period. - Have an array of resources available to share with students Ability to communicate complex concepts to students by breaking these ideas down into more relatable…
Di
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Di

Economics Tutor Shenton Park, WA
The most important things are helping students to achieve their goals while keeping their confidence, as well as letting them know what they are good at. I am a patient, organised an responsible person. I always keep open communication with my students which help me identify the best way that can help my student. I believe confidence is important,…
Shin Hean
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Shin Hean

Economics Tutor Nedlands, WA
Its about making them interested in the subject, not about forcing knowledge upon them I am someone who is very versatile, so I would want to look for different ways on how the students can learn about a…

Local Reviews

Austin is a positive, helpful young man who was very polite and knew his stuff. I would highly recommend him.
Anita, Doubleview

Inside ScarboroughTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Max focused on rounding numbers and identifying significant figures in maths, while in English he practised narrative writing and explored levels of text analysis using Artemis Fowl.

For Year 10, Mia worked through algebraic expansion and rearranging equations on both sides for maths, with some time reviewing her assigned novel for English.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Tom tackled calculus concepts such as drawing derivatives and second derivatives from given functions, then revisited sequences and series along with exponential functions by working through past test questions step-by-step.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student working on algebra often set out equations messily, making it hard to spot errors—one tutor noted, "the layout is all over the place," which slowed progress and created confusion during revision.

In Year 10 English, another student did not complete assigned reading before the session; as a result, text analysis became superficial and he struggled to move beyond plot summary.

Meanwhile, a Year 7 student avoided practicing unfamiliar maths problems in favour of easier questions, limiting exposure to challenging concepts.

These habits led to missed opportunities for deeper understanding and skill development in both subjects.

Recent Achievements

One Scarborough tutor noticed a Year 10 student who used to struggle with algebra now showing all her working out and coming prepared with past test results—she's clearly taking more ownership of her learning.

Another high schooler who had found differentiation tricky last term was able to tackle optimisation questions smoothly after a single explanation, asking specific follow-up questions instead of just guessing.

Meanwhile, in primary sessions, one younger student who often hesitated over unfamiliar words has started sounding them out independently and even asks for help when stuck, rather than skipping ahead.

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 Scarborough Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St John's School.