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

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Tutors in St Clair include an ATAR 99.10 mathematician and prize-winning science scholar, experienced K–12 and university-level tutors, retired secondary maths teachers with decades of classroom expertise, passionate education and engineering students with high distinctions, peer mentors, and accomplished youth leaders skilled at guiding students across maths, English, science, and more.

Alyssa
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Alyssa

Legal Studies Tutor Luddenham, NSW
Being patient so the student does not feel intimidated or rushed and taking time in teaching content to ensure that the student actually understands what is being taught. I have a good knowledge of maths as I just completed advanced and extension 1 for my HSC. I am also able to break things down for…
Anisa
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Anisa

Legal Studies Tutor St Marys, NSW
I think the most importing things a tutor can do for a student is to understand them and assist them in anyway possible to reach their full potential. I think my strengths as a atutor would be being able to understand a students needs and willing to work with them the way they want to so that it is easier for them to understand and learn and to…
1st Lesson Trial

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Areeba
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Areeba

Legal Studies Tutor Caddens, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do for a student is to personalise the learning to suit the student's strengths, to work on their weaknesses but highlight strong points to instil confidence. A tutor must treat the student as an individual and listen carefully rather than just applying the same format for each student. Through a combination…
Darsh
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Darsh

Legal Studies Tutor Kingswood, NSW
The most important things a tutor can do are to make concepts clear, build students' confidence, and create a supportive learning environment. By breaking down difficult material and personalising lessons, students can better understand the content at their own pace. By helping them feel confident and supported, it encourages active engagement and…
Atifa
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Atifa

Legal Studies Tutor Arndell Park, NSW
I believe the most important things as a tutor include: - developing children's love for learning, - building their inquisitive nature, - being able to teach the content according to the needs and learning style of the students, - developing a love for reading, and - listening to, and understanding the students' concerns and guiding them…
Aiceline
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Aiceline

Legal Studies Tutor Woodcroft, NSW
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to help them fully understand the subject and its topics. Once a student properly understands the contents then they can successfully apply the right information to the questions. I can explain a concept or topic in different ways and perspective. This is important as students are very…

Local Reviews

Matthew has become much happier to talk & often inform us about math problems & the confidence he has gained even at this early stage of being tutored is huge. Andrew has been a tremendous help so far.
Linsay, St Clair

Inside St ClairTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Olivia worked through simplifying fractions and foundational algebra skills, building confidence by practising with real-life number examples.

For Year 9, Ethan tackled surface area calculations for pyramids with rectangular bases and used bearings to solve navigation-style problems.

Meanwhile, in Year 11, Mia focused on applying the sine and cosine rules to non-right triangles as well as working with rates, ratios, and direct versus inverse proportion using worded questions for context.

Recent Challenges

A Year 8 student hesitated to show working in algebra, which, as a tutor noted, "made it hard to backcheck if an answer was incorrect." This reluctance left small errors undetected and undermined confidence when reviewing.

In Year 11 Physics, difficulty linking current topics with prior coursework meant harder HSC-style questions were often avoided in revision; time spent re-reading theory replaced targeted practice.

A Year 10 learner relied on being shown steps before attempting problems alone, leading to uncertainty and frequent second-guessing during independent work. Exam pressure amplified these habits—answers rewritten repeatedly instead of tackling new questions.

Recent Achievements

One St Clair tutor noted that a Year 10 student who previously hesitated to show her working is now consistently writing out full steps and even talks through her reasoning, making it easier to spot small mistakes and correct them independently.

In a recent session with a senior high schooler, the student was able to tackle challenging HSC-style questions in physics—he initially struggled with theory recall but, after some targeted revision, managed medium-difficulty problems without prompts.

Meanwhile, a Year 6 learner who often guessed answers before is now asking for clarification when unsure and recently worked through all types of angle questions methodically.

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 St Clair Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like St Clair High School.