Due to the current situation we are experiencing significant demand for tutoring. Fast track your enrolment online: Enrol Online Now

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

100% Good Fit
Guarantee

Keperra's tutors include a medal-winning Australian Maths Competition top 0.01% achiever and Olympiad medallist, a qualified primary school teacher with international classroom and coaching experience, maths specialists with years of K–12 tutoring, IB graduates with ATARs above 97, high-achieving science scholars, peer mentors, youth leaders, camp organisers, and subject award-winners across STEM and English.

Anna
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Anna

Legal Studies Tutor Bardon, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do are to listen to their students and respond accordingly when tutoring them. It is also important to encourage their abilities and help them to succeed. A tutor should also be there to encourage continuous learning and creating a positive learning environment. I believe my strengths as a tutor are working…
Jenna
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • QCE

Jenna

Legal Studies Tutor Taringa, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to not only instruct, but listen. Tutoring is a beneficial one on one experience, therefore tutoring has opportunities to become specialised for the students benefit. This can be achieved with asking questions such as “How is this content relevant to the student?†or “Does the…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Aina
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Aina

Legal Studies Tutor West End, QLD
I always say that the most important thing is being patient. I know that every child is different, so tutors have to adapt to each child and teach children in the appropriate way, since each student understands subjects differently. I am a young person, so I am able to understand a child in many situations. I am aware of mental health and the…
Edward
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Edward

Legal Studies Tutor Taringa, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is foster an excitement about the learning process. A good tutor can help a student to achieve not only their language goals but to appreciate how important language is to their overall academic achievement. My strengths as a tutor revolve around my communicative style of teaching/tutoring. I'm…
Jeremy
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Jeremy

Legal Studies Tutor Ashgrove, 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…
Pamudi
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

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…
Taylor
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • Naplan
  • QCE

Taylor

Legal Studies Tutor Kelvin Grove, 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…
Anum
  • y1
  • y2
  • y3
  • y4
  • y5
  • y6
  • y7
  • y8
  • y9
  • y10
  • y11
  • y12
  • QCE

Anum

Legal Studies Tutor Auchenflower, QLD
Communication and trying to understand the way they learn. I think each person learns differently and we must be able to adapt the technical knowledge and provide them with the problem solving skills themselves to be able to answer questions. I am an experienced professional who is also currently studying and completed a degree. I have the…

Local Reviews

We are delighted with Jacques! Ben is very comfortable with him and Jacques gentle manner has helped Ben become less nervous with the student/tutor process. We are looking forward to seeing the results in future.
Nola, Arana Hills

Inside KeperraTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Chloe worked on representing fractions visually and placing them accurately on number lines, while also building confidence with mixed fractions using diagrams.

In Year 9, Emily focused on algebraic techniques including expanding brackets and calculating the distance between two points in the coordinate plane.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Josh explored Pythagoras' theorem and trigonometry concepts such as angles of elevation, applying these through real-world word problems.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student in algebra mixed up x and y coordinates, as the tutor noted, "he kept reversing them when plotting points," which slowed progress on Cartesian plane questions.

In Year 10, a student hesitated to show working when expanding brackets—small sign errors went unnoticed until the end.

A senior student preparing for trigonometry relied heavily on calculator shortcuts rather than showing steps; this made it hard to spot mistakes in angles of elevation tasks.

Meanwhile, a Year 7 student arrived without key materials for probability revision and struggled to get started—momentum was lost before any practice could happen.

Recent Achievements

One Keperra tutor recently saw a Year 10 student who had struggled with binomial functions begin to solve these problems independently, using powers more confidently than before.

In a Year 7 session, a student who used to skip over data analysis tasks was able to explain the difference between mean, median, and mode out loud and chose their own examples without prompting.

Meanwhile, in an upper primary group, one child who previously hesitated to tackle fractions now drew diagrams to show mixed numbers and could accurately label halves and quarters during word problems.

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 Arana Hills Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St William's Primary School.