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

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Gulfview Heights' tutors include seasoned school teachers with postgraduate education degrees, a university lecturer and assistant tutor, accomplished academic award-winners (including an ATAR 95.9 scorer, Maths competition distinction recipient, and Science Honours graduate), experienced K–12 mentors in English and maths, and peer leaders skilled at guiding children through both academic and extracurricular pursuits.

Jagadish
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Jagadish

Legal Studies Tutor Elizabeth Vale, SA
Tutor can make student to understand the subject matter very easily. Tutor can provide academic guidance ,human connection and consistency to achieve academic standard. Some of my greatest strengths are that I’m very energetic and patient. I lean on these qualities heavily while I’m tutoring. I think my energy helps keep students engaged and…
Karl
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Karl

Legal Studies Tutor Hope Valley, SA
To boost the student's self-esteem and confidence in tackling problem-solving situations to achieve personal development and academic progress. Also, to help them pursue their field of interest and career ambitions. Forming professional yet friendly connections with students, parents, and peers allows me to better understand their challenges,…
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Margaret
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Margaret

Legal Studies Tutor Pooraka, SA
By being a good friend who listens and helps them without judging. A good tutor should be patient and supportive of their student. No answer is wrong answer is a very important lesson each child should learn to build their esteem and improve their confidence. This is what a good tutor should inbibe in each child. My strengths as a teacher is…
Angelika Amor
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Angelika Amor

Legal Studies Tutor Walkley Heights, SA
Be patient with them when they're learning. Allow themselves to be open to questions and concerns the student may have, but most of all, support them with their studies. I am very: understanding, empathetic, patient and willing to go about different ways in order for the student to fully grasp the content. I know students learn in a variety of…
Apeksha
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Apeksha

Legal Studies Tutor Hope Valley, SA
Understand where they are coming from and see their point of view on that topic. Being kind but firm so that they learn. Always encourage them no matter what the outcome is. Being patient with them and showing them other ways to do things I'm incredibly - patient - kind and caring - tough love at times - passionate - understanding of all…
Natalia-Belen
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Natalia-Belen

Legal Studies Tutor Oakden, SA
Understanding the students to find out the best way the student learns, always encouraging and empathise with them. Find lots of different ways to explain the same task to ensure they understand what they are trying to achieve I give students the confidence in their own skills to show they can achieve…
Robert
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Robert

Legal Studies Tutor Oakden, SA
Instill confidence in the student about their own ability to learn and achieve their academic goals. The tutor should tailor their approach to the needs of each student. - Not everyone learns the same way and the tutor should be prepared to be creative in the ways he or she teaches core concepts or content. Offer something unique! - Rather…
Therese
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Therese

Legal Studies Tutor Dernancourt, SA
I consider the most important things a tutor can do for a student is to ultimately inspire them in a love of learning and hopefully pass onto them capsules of knowledge which are priceless. My strengths as a tutor are to challenge the pupils to think abstractly about language and harness the true power it possesses. I love hearing the pupil's own…
Keely
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Keely

Legal Studies Tutor Burton, SA
I think the most important things a tutor can do is a) be consistent and persistent - constantly show up, be willing to explain things 100 times if that's what is needed. The student needs to have faith in you. And b) build confidence - tutoring isn't a short term option, by teaching them the skills of how to attack problems they don't understand,…
Michelle
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Michelle

Legal Studies Tutor Enfield, SA
Just being able to provide a good quality of help and support for a student, in an encouraging and motivating manner, is what I would consider to be the most important thing a tutor could do for their student. Furthermore, creating that resilience and space of being able to ask for help without feeling shame or guilt along the way. I believe that…

Local Reviews

Georgia is absolutely loving her tutor, I am very impressed with her myself, she is a lovely young lady.
Nicole, Gulfview Heights

Inside Gulfview HeightsTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 9 student Kiran tackled quadratics by sketching graphs and practising factorisation methods, focusing on solving for x.

Year 10 student Ava reviewed key finance concepts, working through simple and compound interest as well as superannuation calculations.

Meanwhile, Year 4 student Sam worked on understanding common unit fractions and calculating discounts in real-life money problems.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 mathematics, Joanne sometimes skips writing out her working, which made it harder to spot where sign errors crept in during algebra and fractions.

In several senior lessons, she hesitated with questions that were worded differently from those practiced—leading to confusion about what the question actually required.

At a primary level, homework was often incomplete or forgotten ("forgets to do homework"), and work on time-telling tasks showed repeated errors when minutes varied (e.g., moving from 5:45 to 8:15).

These patterns left gaps unaddressed before new material arrived.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Gulfview Heights noticed that Joanne, a Year 10 student, now chooses the right factorisation technique on her own and corrects small mistakes as she works—just weeks ago, she'd hesitate and wait for prompts.

Another high school session saw Joanne applying new finance formulas straight after learning them, moving from confusion about simple versus compound interest to solving real-world problems without extra help.

In a primary session, one younger student who used to rely heavily on hints now reads out loud independently and can spot her own errors before the tutor steps in.

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 Para Hills Community Hub Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Gulfview Heights Primary School.