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

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Chermside's tutors include a secondary maths teacher with a postgraduate education degree and seven years' experience, a 4th-year K–12 Education student and learning support officer awarded for teaching placements, an ATAR 99.45 high-achiever and seasoned online tutor, experienced early childhood educators, peer mentors, and multiple university students with coaching and academic leadership backgrounds.

Lidia
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Lidia

Legal Studies Tutor Bulimba, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to motivate them, encourages students to strive to be the best they can, to reach their goals, to recognize their strengths, to focus on learning so that they will be successful in the future. Additionally to encourage the students to identify several alternative study strategies from…
Jeremy
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Jeremy

Legal Studies Tutor Newmarket, QLD
A tutor must be patient and listen to how the student feels and explains their material. Without this we can't understand where the gaps are in the students knowledge OR whether they really do understand, but just in a different way. I have infinite patience, I can adjust my communication style, and I when faced with something unfamiliar I have…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Taylor
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Taylor

Legal Studies Tutor Herston, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do is be there for their student, and understand the way that they learn. Understanding where their challenges are and where their strengths are. Understanding what teaching style and environment works for their student and adapting their sessions to suit. It is also important to not judge them based on their…
Pamudi
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Pamudi

Legal Studies Tutor Albany Creek, QLD
I believe the most important thing a tutor can do is to make the subject matter enjoyable for students. 1. I believe my strengths would be being able to empathise with students, having a positive attitude towards learning, teaching and my subject, I have excellent communication skills and I'm patient and tolerant. 2. While I was a peer tutor, I…
Katrina
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Katrina

Legal Studies Tutor Hawthorne, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is grow their confidence in the subject matter so that they know, with work, they will understand what their teacher is telling them and succeed rather than constantly feeling defeated. I believe my main strength as a tutor will be my ability to communicate with students. It is important not to…

Local Reviews

I have to say though that the coach you put me with -- Ali, was really great!
Laureen, Chermside

Inside ChermsideTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Matilda worked on converting fractions into decimals and dividing whole numbers by fractions, using visual aids to support understanding.

Year 10 student Brodie focused on networks and financial maths, applying concepts through assessment tasks and targeted practice questions.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Stephanie reviewed index laws alongside algebraic skills like grouping like terms and expanding brackets, with extra time spent refining responses for an upcoming assessment.

Recent Challenges

A Year 9 student repeatedly lost her formula "cheat sheet" before tests, making last-minute revision stressful and undermining her confidence with unfamiliar questions. "She looked up formulas on Google instead of practicing recall," noted a tutor, so memorization didn't improve for test day.

In Year 11 Maths, messy or incomplete class notes meant key methods were forgotten by the next session—without periodic review, foundational skills slipped away when harder problems appeared.

Meanwhile, a Year 3 student hesitated to attempt new types of questions independently, requiring step-by-step guidance and losing time whenever instructions changed mid-task.

Recent Achievements

One Chermside tutor noticed that Claudia, a Year 10 student who used to hesitate and rely heavily on guidance, now works through most maths problems independently and only seeks help for particularly tough questions.

In another session, Jackson, a high schooler, was able to use the Talk Aloud strategy to clearly explain his thinking in algebra—previously he'd struggled to verbalise his steps or ask for clarification.

Meanwhile, Matilda in primary school has started finishing creative writing tasks more willingly and even sticks with difficult exercises until completion, rather than giving up when she gets stuck.

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 Chermside Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Wavell Heights State School.