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

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Tutors in Fig Tree Pocket include an IB 98.05 ATAR graduate and multi-subject awardee, a seasoned K–12 English and maths tutor with postgraduate credentials, multiple high-achieving university scholars (GPA 6.25+, Dean's List), current school teachers and coaches, experienced peer mentors, debating captains, and science/engineering students with national competition and leadership accolades.

Edwin
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Edwin

Legal Studies Tutor Chelmer, QLD
Listen to feedback. Make sure they understand what they are being taught and determine if a new approach is needed. Sometimes the same information can be summarised and presented in a different way that is just easier for some people to understand. My own capacity for learning. Information retention and comprehensive analysis. Communication…
Edward
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Edward

Legal Studies Tutor Indooroopilly, 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…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Legal Studies

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Anna
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Anna

Legal Studies Tutor Toowong, 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…
Aina
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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…
DRISHTI
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DRISHTI

Legal Studies Tutor South Brisbane, QLD
A tutor should be patient and should be able to accomodate oneself with the students. The main aim of the tutor should be to suit to the needs of the child. I am extremely patient with students and I can listen to all that they have to offer. I can deal with kids since I have a younger brother. My biggest strength is that I wouldn't hesitate to…
Ana
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Ana

Legal Studies Tutor Bellbowrie, QLD
While I believe it is obviously important to help a student learn and understand their chosen subject, it is also important to support and encourage confidence in a student. I found during my schooling years that the subjects I most succeeded in were ones where my teachers were kind and encouraging - it allowed me to feel comfortable to ask…
Damini
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Damini

Legal Studies Tutor Woolloongabba, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for the student is to take time to understand their expectations and needs as well as motivate the student to do better using appreciation and engagement. As a tutor, using relevant and relatable examples to explain concepts, providing important tips to remember and understand is the content are my…
Umucaltum
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Umucaltum

Legal Studies Tutor Coopers Plains, QLD
- Helping the student overcome their problem area (concepts or areas the struggle to understand or comprehend) - Motivate them along the way -Help them develop a good work ethic to enable them to stay motivated even when you are not tutoring them -Listen to their concerns and encourage them to ask questions along the way My strengths as a…
Soniya
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Soniya

Legal Studies Tutor Fairfield, QLD
A tutor should be able to convince a student that they are good enough regardless of their level of achievement. I believe my biggest strength as a tutor is my ability to ensure that the student and I are both on the same page with the students understanding of the topic and moving forward…
Sophie-Lea
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Sophie-Lea

Legal Studies Tutor Greenslopes, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to listen and be compasionate. By listening a student one is able to understand how they learn, and what they especially need to learn. Furthermore by being compasionate the student understands that you are trying to help them, and will feel more comfortable learning with you. Patient and…
Emma
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Emma

Legal Studies Tutor Brisbane, QLD
The most important things a tutor can do is empower the student to be confident in themselves, along their learning journey. Through active listening, creative problem solving, and consistency, most students will be able to cultivate an enjoyment for learning new things about the world they live in, and have the inner confidence to tackle…
Violet
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Violet

Legal Studies Tutor Brisbane, QLD
I believe it is important to show empathy, being able to relate to where the students are at is extremely important in building that relationship with them. Creating that relationship will allow students to share how they are feeling in terms of their confidence or concerns with certain subjects. Being honest is another thing a tutor can do for a…
Jeremy
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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…
Taylor
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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…

Local Reviews

With Oscars learning disorder he really wouldn’t be fully accessing the curriculum content if it weren’t for Matthew’s help. We really appreciate his patience and friendly disposition and non-judgemental attitude.
Rosilyn, Kenmore

Inside Fig Tree PocketTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 6 student Meg tackled ratio problems and reviewed tricky questions from class, often using visual examples to support understanding.

In Year 8, Sophie worked through a maths practice test and explored probability concepts with real-world style questions.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Jack revised derivatives and logarithms by tackling past exam-style questions, helping consolidate his skills ahead of assessment.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 Maths, one student consistently avoided the final exam questions—especially multi-step problems with unfamiliar scenarios—preferring to revisit easier practice sets. This meant they missed chances to build confidence tackling the hardest test sections.

For a Year 11 Engineering assignment, another student delayed starting the "solve" section until prompted, leading to rushed last-minute work and overlooked feedback ("needs to make sure that his PSMT is done up to the solve section by next Wednesday").

In Year 6, forgetting about lessons altogether resulted in missed homework submissions and falling behind on key content.

Recent Achievements

A Fig Tree Pocket tutoring session saw a Year 10 student, who had previously struggled with homework independence, tackle all assigned maths problems solo and even achieve a B+ on her recent test—she only needed to check one answer with the tutor.

Meanwhile, a senior student finally cracked the logic behind quadratic discriminants after weeks of confusion, confidently applying it to enrichment questions that used to feel out of reach.

At primary level, one younger learner surprised their tutor by reading instructions aloud for the first time without prompting before completing all ten worksheet problems on their own.

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 Kenmore Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Brisbane Montessori School.