Shubham Kalra

Author of three e-books on Amazon (One for Statistics and two for Econometrics). I have 1500+ hours of teaching experience in the field of Microeconomics, Statistics and Econometrics. I became an online tutor in 2015 and have been teaching full time since then. I have worked with students who were complete beginners, as well as those who were facing challenges in mastering advanced topics.

I completely understand the initial struggle in decoding the concepts and formulas. I am adept in breaking down difficult concepts with the use of simple examples. I don't encourage memorisation and simply recalling the formulas, instead, I focus on the 'why' and 'how'.

I understand that every student has a different way of understanding things. Some students understand the concepts when explained through analogies, others when shown mathematical foundation behind them. I modify my teaching methodology depending on what the student is comfortable with.

Some of the courses I have catered to:
EC226: Econometrics 1 (University of Warwick)
EC2020: Elements of Econometrics (London School of Economics - LSE)
MG205: Econometrics - Theory and Applications (London School of Economics - LSE)
EC3301: Econometrics (St Andrews)
ECON W3412: Introduction to Econometrics (Columbia University)
EC2017: Introductory Econometrics (City, University of London)
BEE2031: Econometrics (University of Exeter)
Econometrics: University of Jordan
Econometrics: University of Birmingham
Econometric Analysis: Newcastle University
BEE2006: Statistics and Econometrics (University of Exeter)
PSYC40122, PSYC49122: Advanced Experimentation and Statistics 1 (Nottingham Trent University)
MT2504: Combinatorics and Probability (St. Andrews)
ECON103: Quantitative Methods for Economics (Lancaster University)
MT2508: Statistical Inference (St. Andrews)
153400121: Quantitative Methods for Economists (SOAS, University of London)
EC3301: Statistics and Econometrics (University of St.Andrews)
UN 1201: Statistics and Probability (Columbia University)
Introduction to Statistics: Queenmary University
Microeconomics: University of Kent
Intermediate Microeconomics (ECON 3211) - Columbia University