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

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Tutors in Basket Range include a PhD physicist and seasoned university demonstrator, a Master of Teaching-qualified science educator, multiple tutors with ATARs above 97—including subject prizewinners and Dux—robotics competition leaders, Kumon-trained mentors, experienced primary classroom assistants, accomplished musicians and creative writers, and academic coaches with extensive experience teaching and mentoring K–12 students.

Jonathan
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Jonathan

Legal Studies Tutor Burnside, SA
The most important thing a tutor can do for their student is to accommodate their learning style. Students have ranging techniques and motivations when learning content. Personally, I struggled with auditory learning as a student, and would therefore ask my teachers to give me a range of tactile learning techniques to assist in my learning. I…
Yeongyeon
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Yeongyeon

Legal Studies Tutor Rostrevor, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is provide every opportunity for them to kindle their own knowledge. As Socrates said, "Education is the kindling of a flame, not the filling of a vessel." In other words, it is the tutor's job to introduce new knowledge as the base tools and then question the student to allow them to…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Harshini
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Harshini

Legal Studies Tutor Rostrevor, SA
I believe it is important to be able to pass on the knowledge I have as a tutor to my students. Another important aspect of tutoring is to be able to teach at a pace and style that caters to each individual student so that they are able to obtain the most out of the session. I find that the patience I have is a great strength as a tutor, as there…
Olivia
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Olivia

Legal Studies Tutor Stirling, SA
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is be able to teach them skills that they can use in their studies after they are finished with a tutor. Obviously it is a tutors job to teach them the task at hand, but I believe a great tutor is able to teach the student skills that will allow them to do better in school without the…
Timothy
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Timothy

Legal Studies Tutor Burnside, SA
My understanding of a tutors role is not to do the students work, yet to uncover their natural ability so that they may proceed to increase their academic results. Therefore, the most important thing a tutor can do is not only provide advice but draw out the best of people. I have been told I am a 'people person', I previously worked in a busy…

Local Reviews

Alex is a natural teacher. He has a particular knack of being able to explain things in many different ways until the student gets it! He does this in a kind and caring way, building the students confidence.
Rebecca

Inside Basket RangeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Jack focused on fraction addition and subtraction with common denominators, then moved on to simplifying mixed number fractions using short written responses.

In Year 9, Alyssia worked through titration equations in chemistry—calculating molar ratios and manipulating the formula n = m/M and C × V—before revising galvanic cells and redox reactions for her upcoming exam.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Ethan tackled factorisation of polynomials alongside graphing linear equations, using practice problems to reinforce both skills.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors—this made it harder to spot where he went wrong and slowed progress on trickier questions.

A Year 9 student's messy handwriting and unclear layout, especially with fractions, led to confusion when checking answers later.

For a Year 11 Chemistry assignment, over-reliance on looking back at old solutions meant less independent problem-solving; the habit surfaced again during test prep for equations and conversions.

One Year 6 student lost focus during reasoning tasks, missing question cues entirely.

Missed opportunities for clear written reasoning meant strong understanding didn't always show up in assessment marks.

Recent Achievements

One Basket Range tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who, after repeatedly losing marks to "silly mistakes" in algebra and test settings, began slowing down and double-checking his work, catching errors before submitting practice questions.

A Year 9 student who used to wait passively for hints is now independently asking clarifying questions whenever she's stuck—especially with statistics topics—and even requests extra examples for practice.

Meanwhile, during a primary session, a younger learner started using commas correctly in writing exercises without reminders, having previously needed constant prompting.

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 Stirling Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Basket Range Primary School.