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

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Jacka's tutors include a Kip McGrath senior tutor and former secondary school teacher with over seven years' classroom experience, a preschool educator trained in Montessori methods, seasoned K–8 maths and science teachers, an award-winning STEM mentor, early childhood specialists, peer mentors with ATARs above 90, and youth camp leaders recognised for academic excellence and student support.

Hadia
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Hadia

Legal Studies Tutor Watson, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for their students is to provide ongoing support and encouragement. It is crucial that tutors not only identify but also highlight the unique strengths of each student. This approach empowers tutors, as it allows them to build a better connection with their students and instill confidence in their abilities,…
Maximus
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Maximus

Legal Studies Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Build rapport and knowledge that is retained long-term and not merely short-term. Patience and clarity in speaking are what my core strengths…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Chiamaka
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Chiamaka

Legal Studies Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
Being patient and making sure that students throughly understand concepts and can apply it their daily lives. One of my strengths as a tutor is throughly explaining each concept, ensuring that my students come out fully understanding concepts. I also take pride in being incredibly patient and never letting anyone feel…
noor
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noor

Legal Studies Tutor Gungahlin, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is identify any key areas for improvement academically and set goals together to maximise and successfully achieve those goals and reach new levels of academic capability. Additionally, it is also important for a tutor to have a respectful and a comfortable relationship with their student so…
Rookmini
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Rookmini

Legal Studies Tutor Franklin, ACT
I think the most important things a tutor can do for a student is not only to teach, but to explain the “why?†behind everything. Explaining practicality and the reasons why something is taught can be useful all throughout their lives. Another useful thing I consider is the ability to teach skills the student will be able to apply themselves…
Gray
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Gray

Legal Studies Tutor Lawson, ACT
Show support, give advice where there may be struggles. Dedication, support and taking the time to…
Adam
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Adam

Legal Studies Tutor Mckellar, ACT
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to make the student interested in whatever subject they are learning. The best way to learn anything is to show genuine interest in that topic. Tutors should not only assist students in specific areas, they should also engage with the student in a manner that makes the student interested in…

Local Reviews

Parixit is working hard to help our son with his chemistry and he is enjoying and getting a lot out of the sessions.
Kirstie

Inside JackaTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student William focused on practising times tables for 2, 3, and 5 by reciting them aloud and started exploring division as the opposite of multiplication.

Year 8 student revised complementary and supplementary angles, then applied angle rules in triangles—including Pythagoras' theorem—using visual diagrams to support understanding.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Jacob worked through quadratic expressions by expanding brackets and factorising terms using exercises from the Cambridge textbook.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 maths, a student repeatedly left homework incomplete and forgot their school notebook—once explaining, "past test papers have been damaged and can't be brought back." This made it hard to track progress between lessons.

In Year 11, another student completed their homework at 3am but didn't understand the working out until hints were given through Mathspace; study strategies were printed out for future use.

One tutor noted that a Year 9 student "forgot to take notes for half the lesson," so missed key points on angle reasoning. These lapses meant valuable time was lost relearning rather than building new skills.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Jacka noticed a Year 8 student who used to stay quiet now regularly asks for help when stuck and shows more of their working out, making it easier to spot where they're going wrong.

In high school maths, one student recently completed all probability assignment questions independently—something she'd hesitated with before—and even explained her steps aloud.

Another senior student, after previously rushing through tests and missing details, slowed down during a timed quiz and caught her own mistakes without prompting, finishing with every answer checked herself.

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 Gungahlin Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Taqwa School.