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Private legal-studies tutors that come to you in person or online

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Tutors in Acton include a PhD scholar and university lecturer with 15+ academic publications, an ANU medical student with five years' K–12 science tutoring experience, an IB Dux (ATAR 99.45) and Olympiad awardee, Extension Maths high-achievers, seasoned private tutors, peer mentors, netball coaches, reading specialists, and scholarship recipients recognised for both teaching ability and academic excellence.

Lydia
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Lydia

Legal Studies Tutor Denman Prospect, ACT
I believe the two most important things a tutor can do for a student are to aid them in the learning gaps they may have and to help them in building a positive relationship with academics. It is common that if students may have a negative relationship with subjects they are not very confident in. Building confidence in these subjects is one of the…
Adam
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Adam

Legal Studies Tutor Mckellar, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make the student interested in whatever subject they are learning. The best way to learn anything is to show genuine interest in that topic. Tutors should not only assist students in specific areas, they should also engage with the student in a manner that makes the student interested in…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

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Nima
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Nima

Legal Studies Tutor Waramanga, ACT
I believe tutor should make learning as simplistic as possible by relating the learning into real life on their applicability and usefulness to appreciate and making learning interesting and enjoyable. As a tutor, I relate philosophical aspects to the subject of teaching and in the process build strong psychology of the life and the subject I…
Jessica
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Jessica

Legal Studies Tutor Duffy, ACT
In terms of the most important things a tutor can do, I would emphasize: Truly getting to know each student's unique circumstances, strengths, weaknesses, interests and motivations in order to personalize the learning approach. Building rapport and making emotional connections to keep students engaged and feeling supported in a judgment-free…
Rookmini
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Rookmini

Legal Studies Tutor Harrison, ACT
I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student is not only to teach, but to explain the “why?†behind everything. Explaining practicality and the reasons why something is taught can be useful all throughout their lives. Another useful thing I consider is the ability to teach skills the student will be able to apply themselves…

Local Reviews

Zacharia is a great fit for my son. Very lovely person, with same aims like my son.
Birgitta

Inside ActonTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Zoe focused on converting between decimals, fractions, and percentages using diagrams for visual support, and practised adding and subtracting decimals.

In Year 8, Sam tackled simplifying fractions as well as identifying equivalent fractions through targeted exercises.

For Year 10, Emily completed a topic test covering algebraic equations—particularly those involving multiplication and division—and then reviewed how to solve linear equations step by step.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student struggled with exam planning, as he needed to write a bit quicker in order to make sure he can complete the exam—and also properly pace himself during the exam and not spend too long on a confusing question.

In Year 8 English, skipping over assignment instructions meant one student missed key requirements and jumped ahead, leading to confusion about what was actually expected.

For a Year 6 maths learner, foundational times tables knowledge remained shaky; this slowed her down even on simple problems.

After missing class content, a senior student felt lost in algebra until revisiting basics restored some confidence.

Recent Achievements

One Acton tutor noticed a Year 10 student now regularly back-checks her maths, which has led to fewer careless mistakes—a big shift from earlier sessions when she'd rush through problems.

A high school English student recently began giving creative writing questions a proper go rather than hesitating; he's started catching repetitive sentence starters on his own after targeted feedback.

Meanwhile, a younger student who was initially quiet now tells the tutor exactly what's confusing during lessons and asks for help right away instead of guessing.

In one session, she tackled tricky decimal operations after just a brief explanation.

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 Kingston Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Yarralumla Primary School.