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

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Clyde's tutors feature a former senior high school maths and physics teacher who authored HSC resources, Cluey Learning specialists trained in supporting diverse learners, an English teacher with curriculum design experience, multiple ATAR 90+ achievers from selective schools, experienced peer mentors, and university scholars excelling in engineering, science, education, and advanced mathematics.

Dana
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Dana

Legal Studies Tutor Wentworth Point, NSW
Being patient, understanding and ensuring that the tutor is in no way condescending towards the student. Going above and beyond for students, as well as being able to connect with them on their level Throughout my degree, we've been taught how to relay information to various audiences. Being able to explain concepts age-appropriately is definitely…
Aidan
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Aidan

Legal Studies Tutor Regents Park, NSW
The tutor must create an environment of trust and respect to foster the tutor-tutee relationship. This in turn will make the student feel more accountable to the tutor to do well. My greatest strength is my communication. I make a concerted effort to collaborate with my students when developing their learning plans. A strong focus on goal setting…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Martin
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Martin

Legal Studies Tutor Chester Hill, NSW
Patience and motivation are the main elements that are important as a tutor. As tutoring may be an outside source of school that is not compulsory, it is important to be able to push the students to revise on their work and properly understand their content to a higher level. Tutors are to act patient and as a role model for their students,…
Amelia
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Amelia

Legal Studies Tutor Carlingford, NSW
- Give them regular feedback and answer questions to help them improve and in turn grow their own confidence in their abilities - Engage, motivate and encourage the student in their studies so that they study because they want to not because they're forced to, this is especially important in establishing consistency in work and improvement As…
Eric
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Eric

Legal Studies Tutor Greystanes, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student extend beyond imparting knowledge; it involves inspiring confidence, fostering a love for learning, and tailoring the educational experience to individual needs. A tutor should create a supportive environment where questions are encouraged, challenges are met with patience, and each student…
Ryan
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Ryan

Legal Studies Tutor Homebush, NSW
I believe as a tutor, the most important thing is to pass on crucial skills. Tutoring lessons involve not only achieving the best academic results but also learn crucial skills that can be applied by the student in many aspects. I believe effective and open communication is a strength for me as a tutor. I can understand the needs of the student…
Nic
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Nic

Legal Studies Tutor Winston Hills, NSW
I think the most important thing for a tutor to do is to always be available to the students for any questions they may have, in and outside of the lesson. This is because I beleive that being afraid to ask questions is the biggest barrier to learning as this conversational aspect is crucial to understanding a concept entirely. Apart from that,…
Sujan
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Sujan

Legal Studies Tutor Strathfield, NSW
Tutoring can be challenging, especially when it comes to motivating your learner. You see the potential they have, and they often hear about the potential they have, but they do not feel as though they got what it takes. Living in such a busy and demanding time can often make us feel the time constraints on everything we do and we expect our…
archie
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archie

Legal Studies Tutor Carramar, NSW
A tutor shoud be able to determine the relative strengths and weaknesses of the student and proceed to generate real results for the student. This helps the student develop confidence and progression. MY strengths are patience, persistence and extensive experience in tutoring. I also have a strong academic backgroud which helps in dealing with the…
Tracy
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Tracy

Legal Studies Tutor Fairfield, NSW
I believe a tutor can offer a student so much more that just knowledge; the encouragement of a tutor can unlock a student’s potential and lead them towards consistent success. Tutoring sessions can make a student feel heard and understood which is so important in a student’s journey through self discovery in their schooling years. As a tutor,…
werwer
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werwer

Legal Studies Tutor Strathfield, NSW
As a tutor cannot take exams or do homework for the student, the most important things a tutor can do for a student are to have faith in the student's ability and assist the student in every way possible to ensure that the student has faith in their own ability to achieve their goals. Patience, passion and empathy. Patience as it takes time to…
Gabriel
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Gabriel

Legal Studies Tutor Georges Hall, NSW
One important thing a tutor can do is clearly understand what a student wants with their tutor. For example, if a student already know concepts really well, a tutor should be able to identify this and spend more time on areas where a student may struggle. Furthermore, it is important to consider the student first and foremost. A tutor should be…
Martina
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Martina

Legal Studies Tutor Mount Lewis, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do is believe in the student. This along with teaching them the value of hard work is significant as it pushes a student to access their potential knowing that they are supported. The value of hard work is also an imperative that should be conveyed through the tutors lessons regardless of the content taught. I…

Local Reviews

Callan is extremely happy with Amandi, he is even sitting and doing extra work.
Davina, Dundas

Inside ClydeTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 5 student Jessica worked on converting decimals to mixed numbers and practiced changing mixed numbers back to decimals, focusing on using division for more complex fractions.

In Year 9, Daniel tackled trigonometry by applying the sine and cosine rules to solve bearings problems and completed a topic test that included finding unknown angles.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sam reviewed differentiation using both the chain rule and product rule, concentrating on calculus techniques for upcoming assessments.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 algebra, skipping working steps—"he just wrote the answer without showing his method," as a tutor noted—made it harder to spot where sign errors crept in.

A Year 10 student tackled trigonometric identities but hesitated to try questions unless absolutely certain, erasing partial attempts and avoiding visible mistakes.

Meanwhile, in a Year 5 session on multi-digit multiplication, messy layout meant numbers were misaligned and carried digits were lost mid-calculation.

These habits slowed progress during revision and led to repeated confusion when reviewing past work or correcting misunderstandings in class.

Recent Achievements

One Clyde tutor noted that Jessica, a Year 11 student, had previously struggled with calculus concepts but now independently applies the chain rule and quotient rule to complete differentiation problems correctly.

In another recent session, Elissa (Year 10) shifted from needing step-by-step guidance in statistics to confidently attempting all questions alone, especially when checking for direct proportion in data sets.

Meanwhile, Katelyn in Year 5 used to avoid complex worded maths problems, but last week she broke down multi-step multiplication tasks herself and finished every question without skipping any steps or asking for hints.

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 Granville Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Muslim Girls Grammar School.