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

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Tutors in Macquarie include a mathematics teacher with 14 years' experience and postgraduate counselling credentials, a primary school teacher and curriculum reform participant, high-ATAR achievers including national scholarship recipients, seasoned maths tutors for Years 6–12, an F1 STEM competition finalist, peer mentors, and university students excelling in advanced mathematics and sciences.

Lydia
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Lydia

Legal Studies Tutor Denman Prospect, ACT
I believe the two most important things a tutor can do for a student are to aid them in the learning gaps they may have and to help them in building a positive relationship with academics. It is common that if students may have a negative relationship with subjects they are not very confident in. Building confidence in these subjects is one of the…
Adib
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Adib

Legal Studies Tutor Braddon, ACT
Instill confidence by showing how a few examples can be solved. Patient - can convey complex concepts using simple terms. Tutor with over 20 years of teaching…
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Rookmini
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Rookmini

Legal Studies Tutor Harrison, 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…
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…
Jessica
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Jessica

Legal Studies Tutor Duffy, ACT
In terms of the most important things a tutor can do, I would emphasize: Truly getting to know each student's unique circumstances, strengths, weaknesses, interests and motivations in order to personalize the learning approach. Building rapport and making emotional connections to keep students engaged and feeling supported in a judgment-free…
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…
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…

Local Reviews

Nathaniel managed to engage well with my 7 year old who has ADHD and an adversity to structured learning.
Grant, Macquarie

Inside MacquarieTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 4 student Emily worked on visualising numbers with creative representations to boost addition speed and practiced small operations using cards.

In Year 8, Jacob focused on turning mixed numbers into improper fractions and did quick mental calculations for addition, subtraction, and multiplication.

Meanwhile, Year 10 student Sophie tackled questions involving linear algebra by rearranging equations and working with fractions from her recent lessons.

Recent Challenges

In Year 3 mathematics, one student relied heavily on flashcards for times tables but found oral recall difficult; when asked "2 x 7" without visual aids, hesitation was noticeable. As a tutor noted, "she performs very well, almost instantly, when we use them, whereas if we're doing purely oral exercises, it is a bit harder."

Meanwhile, in Year 10 Maths Methods, incomplete homework (e.g., VCE 2006 Paper and CH2/CH6/CH16 questions) meant less exposure to exam-style problems and limited feedback opportunities.

In Year 12, messy note-taking left gaps in revision chapters—key ideas went unrecorded during complex differentiation practice.

Recent Achievements

One Macquarie tutor noticed a real shift with a Year 4 student who used to rely heavily on her fingers for basic maths, but after practicing verbal games and using flashcards, she now answers multiplication questions without counting out loud.

In a recent high school session, a Year 10 student who had previously struggled with index laws completed all related problems independently and even asked to try harder questions next time.

Another high schooler has started consistently finishing most of their assigned questions correctly during sessions—a big change from earlier lessons when they hesitated to attempt 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 Belconnen Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Macquarie Primary School.