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

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Tutors in Cambridge Park include a university medallist with 5+ years' K–12 maths and science experience, an IB dux in Biology and Chemistry, a Baulkham Hills High graduate with national maths distinctions, HSC Band 6 awardees in English and Maths, experienced school teaching assistants, peer mentors, coding camp leaders, and accomplished academic competition participants.

Isaac
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Isaac

Legal Studies Tutor Cambridge Park, NSW
1. Help them to understand a subject/course/unit 2. See the student’s challenges on a subject as their own challenges 3. Truly personalise the learning. 4. Minimise the student's weaknesses. 5. Share my own learning experiences to encourage students Strong command over my subject area Friendly Good communicator Using inclusive…
Piya
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Piya

Legal Studies Tutor Penrith, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for the student is help uncover their learning style, improve their skills, build confidence in a student and improve their study skills. It is essential for tutors to build a good rapport and advance students' growth and success. I'm organised and have strong time-management skills, which are important…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Alyssa
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Alyssa

Legal Studies Tutor Glenmore Park, NSW
Being patient so the student does not feel intimidated or rushed and taking time in teaching content to ensure that the student actually understands what is being taught. I have a good knowledge of maths as I just completed advanced and extension 1 for my HSC. I am also able to break things down for…
Peter
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Peter

Legal Studies Tutor St Clair, NSW
I think the most important thing a tutor can do for their students is to develop relationships so that the student is entirely comfortable with being honest with the tutor about questions and concerns with academics, as well as beyond what is required by the curriculum. A tutor must be empathetic and patient, and this allows them to create a…
Mehwashma
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Mehwashma

Legal Studies Tutor St Clair, NSW
The two most significant things a tutor can do for a student are to establish a solid, encouraging rapport and modify their method of instruction to suit the student's particular requirements. It is essential to establish a secure space where children may voice their concerns and ask questions. Additionally, assisting students in acquiring…
Darsh
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Darsh

Legal Studies Tutor Kingswood, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do are to make concepts clear, build students' confidence, and create a supportive learning environment. By breaking down difficult material and personalising lessons, students can better understand the content at their own pace. By helping them feel confident and supported, it encourages active engagement and…
Areeba
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Areeba

Legal Studies Tutor Caddens, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to personalise the learning to suit the student's strengths, to work on their weaknesses but highlight strong points to instil confidence. A tutor must treat the student as an individual and listen carefully rather than just applying the same format for each student. Through a combination…
Aaris
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Aaris

Legal Studies Tutor Caddens, NSW
The three most crucial things a tutor can do for a student are to create a safe and stimulating learning atmosphere, to tailor the curriculum to the needs of each individual, and to instill confidence in the student's skills. Fostering a friendly environment encourages students to be open to making errors and asking questions—all of which are…
Noelle
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Noelle

Legal Studies Tutor Caddens, NSW
Amongst other things, being a figure of support for students is very important as a tutor. Instead of solely fulfilling one's role in an academic tutor aspect, instilling values within students with regards to work quality, and being someone for them to talk to is a significant aspect of this position I believe my ability to relate to students,…
Anisa
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Anisa

Legal Studies Tutor North St Marys, NSW
I think the most importing things a tutor can do for a student is to understand them and assist them in anyway possible to reach their full potential. I think my strengths as a atutor would be being able to understand a students needs and willing to work with them the way they want to so that it is easier for them to understand and learn and to…
Sara
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Sara

Legal Studies Tutor St Clair, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do is foster a sense of understanding where a student is not just learning for the sake of it but can truly understand the implications of the subject matter and why certain things occur. This helps to develop critical thinking skills and an intrinsic motivation to learn that extends beyond memorisation and…
Alina
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Alina

Legal Studies Tutor Melonba, NSW
Understanding Individual Needs. Building Confidence. Setting Clear Goals. Fostering Critical Thinking. Providing Constructive Feedback. Creating an Engaging Learning Environment. Strong Verbal and Written Communication. Ability to Connect with Students. Tailoring Teaching Methods. Excellent Organizational Skills. Identifying and…
Navyah
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Navyah

Legal Studies Tutor Marsden Park, NSW
I believe the most important things a tutor can do are to build a student’s confidence, provide clear explanations, and create a supportive learning environment where students feel comfortable asking questions. A tutor should help students develop strong study habits and problem-solving skills rather than just giving answers, so they become more…

Local Reviews

Joshua Woods is an excellent tutor. He really explained everything to my daughter and helped her understand what she needs to know. Thank you so much.
Monique, Cambridge Park

Inside Cambridge ParkTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 8 student Sophie worked on calculating surface area and volume of composite solids, including breaking down complex shapes like cylinders and triangular prisms, as well as practicing rearranging equations with multiple variables.

Year 9 student Hazell focused on expanding and factorising algebraic expressions such as monic quadratic trinomials using methods like the distributive law and FOIL, then applied trigonometric ratios to solve for unknown sides in right-angled triangles, including worded problems involving bearings.

Meanwhile, Year 6 student Larena practiced converting between mixed and improper fractions, simplifying fractions by identifying the highest common factor, and started learning strategies for adding and subtracting fractions with different denominators.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student showed a pattern of skipping backchecking in financial mathematics, leading to avoidable errors—"she hadn't read the question properly for the quiz," one tutor noted.

In senior grades, another student repeatedly forgot or avoided homework, limiting retention and making it harder to recall trigonometry and algebra techniques when tested under pressure.

Meanwhile, a Year 7 learner hesitated to attempt questions without reassurance, sometimes erasing working out if unsure. This reluctance slowed problem-solving and left misconceptions unaddressed until prompted by direct feedback in session.

Missed practice and inconsistent revision led to fragile confidence during assessments.

Recent Achievements

One Cambridge Park tutor noticed a big change in Hazell, a high school student who now catches her own "silly mistakes" during algebra practice—something she struggled with before.

In recent sessions, Hazell also managed to complete an assignment section independently after previously needing more guidance, showing real initiative.

Meanwhile, Sophie has started applying new problem-solving strategies by talking through her reasoning out loud and using pen-and-paper checks without prompting; she's also begun identifying and correcting misconceptions herself while working on surface area problems.

For a younger student, Larena moved from doubting her ability with fractions to solving several on her own by the end of the lesson.

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 Penrith City Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Cambridge Park Public School.