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Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in North Maclean include a school Dux and teaching award recipient with experience as a teacher's aide, a qualified secondary teacher and youth mentor, lecturers and private tutors with mathematics degrees, competition high achievers in science and English, peer mentors, club leaders, and educators with proven records inspiring K–12 students to excel.

Raj
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Raj

Economics Tutor Boronia Heights, QLD
Sharing experience and knowledge gained over the years and helping a student gain some valuable insight about different topics. I have good communication skills, pretty good with numbers and calculations and have a good sense of…
Ausaf
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Ausaf

Economics Tutor Greenbank, QLD
Put in the effort to be consistent with lessons. Explaining maths concepts in ways which are easy to understand for everyday…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Local Reviews

After contacting EzyMath Tutoring online my daughter was matched with a Tutor with in 3 days. Sean her Tutor organised her trial session that week. Sean was very patient and helped my daughter in a way she could understand. Giving her the confidence to finish her Maths Assessment. Another session has been booked.
Sammy H, North Maclean

Inside North MacleanTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Alex worked through time series analysis and arithmetic sequences, using real data sets to build understanding.

For Year 11, Taylor reviewed compound interest calculations—both by hand and with Excel—and explored how home loans work in practical contexts.

Meanwhile, Year 12 student Josh tackled the photoelectric effect in Physics, focusing on applying formulas accurately and interpreting challenging exam-style questions.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, one student often hesitated to write out each equation step—"she wanted it to look neat and perfect," a tutor noted—which led to confusion when negative numbers were involved.

In Year 10 chemistry, a student missed lessons due to illness and struggled with more complex reaction ratios, especially recalling the Haber process steps from memory.

A senior maths student relied heavily on notes rather than memorising key formulas, which slowed down problem-solving in test conditions.

After setbacks, motivation sometimes dipped, especially when exam wording was confusing or unfamiliar. This left students second-guessing themselves during assessments.

Recent Achievements

A North Maclean tutor recently noticed a Year 10 student who, after weeks of relying on hints, completed a review quiz with full marks—only requesting help once and checking his own work using a new method.

In another session, a high schooler began consistently referring to notes and textbooks for problem-solving instead of guessing, even neatly crossing out errors rather than scribbling over them.

Meanwhile, an upper primary student contributed her own assumptions during a scatterplot assignment for the first time, moving beyond just following steps and showing more ownership in class discussions.

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 Greenbank Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Australian Technology and Agricultural College.