Due to the current situation we are experiencing significant demand for tutoring. Fast track your enrolment online: Enrol Online Now

Private economics tutors that come to you in person or online

100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Mount Nathan's tutors include a former university assistant professor with 15 years' maths teaching experience, an early childhood specialist and K–6 academic tutor with postgraduate credentials, IB graduates with ATARs up to 98.5 and multiple national awards, seasoned STEM mentors, and school-based educators dedicated to supporting every student's learning journey.

Gurmanjot
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • QCE

Gurmanjot

Economics Tutor Pacific Pines, QLD
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for their student is to increase their confidence levels. This is because a student should be confident about a subject or topic they struggled with after the tutor has helped them through it so that the student themselves are able to replicate the process and adapt to similar questions without…
Bryan
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Bryan

Economics Tutor Carrara, QLD
Soft skills, not only things you learn from a book, being an economics tutor is more than being a teacher, is being also a mentor. Empathy, my upbringing, my skill…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Economics

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Andrew
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Andrew

Economics Tutor Worongary, QLD
To have the ability to listen and shape content to needs of the audience, patience, empathy and ability to understand the difficulties others feel. Being able to create optimal learnings by shaping content/delivery facilitation to meet the needs of mentees/listeners. I believe that I have good time management skills by structuring lesson…
Krishna
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Krishna

Economics Tutor Parkwood, QLD
The most important things an economics tutor can do include being patient with the student. Each student is unique and may be fast or slow in adapting to unfamiliar concepts and a key skill necessary is to be able to account for these disparities and change pace of learning in accordance to the individual students needs’. Additionally, a tutor…
Kiaan
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Kiaan

Economics Tutor Parkwood, QLD
Actually care about them and their improvement. Being a tutor is more than just a 1 hour session with them. We need to be considering each individual students needs and give them a personalised lesson based on their personality and capabilities. -Planning and organisation of lessons -Patience and ability to take different approaches if they…
Raveersingh
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Raveersingh

Economics Tutor Parkwood, QLD
The important things a tutor can do for a student is improve the performance of the student in the subject. Apart from that understanding the students and being a good listener is one of the major strengths of a good tutor. Acknowledging their strengths and working on their weaknesses, making them believe in themselves would help boost their…

Local Reviews

Natalie is absolutely fantastic! I cannot express how good she is with our son! She is so proficient at her job. He has had a sense of achievement after each lesson with her.
Elsbeth

Inside Mount NathanTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 3 student India worked on two and three times tables, telling time on an analogue clock, and using money for practical calculations.

Year 10 student Jade focused on algebraic techniques, including solving equations and applying Pythagoras' theorem to right-angled triangles.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Lisa tackled Biology concepts such as calculating Simpson's Diversity Index for biodiversity studies and constructing punnet squares to predict genetic outcomes.

Recent Challenges

The Year 12 biology student was hesitant to use scientific resources beyond websites for assignments and often needed to double-check unfamiliar methods or terminology with her teacher—"Lisa needed to confirm the results with her teacher as there were things that she hadn't covered in class."

In Year 10 maths, one student's graph work suffered from formatting issues; adjusting how data was graphed took up valuable session time.

Meanwhile, a Year 8 algebra student doubted herself when tackling new types of problems, which slowed progress during practice: this meant more energy spent seeking reassurance than building fluency in key skills.

Recent Achievements

One Mount Nathan tutor noticed a big shift in Ella's approach to maths: after struggling with worded problems and trigonometry, she now draws her own diagrams and breaks down the questions independently before solving them—something she avoided before.

In biology, Lisa began reviewing teacher feedback unprompted on her report and made adjustments during the session instead of waiting for guidance.

Meanwhile, in Year 3, India moved from hesitating with addition games to racing through them faster than ever—she even solved every card correctly using new strategies picked up last week.

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 Helensvale Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Silkwood School.