AS-level Law tutors
1 of 1 UK tutor teaching Law at AS-level.
Law is offered at A-level (AQA, Eduqas, OCR) and covers the legal system, criminal law, tort, contract, and human rights depending on board. It's essay-and-application-heavy — students apply legal rules to fact scenarios in IRAC-style questions, with case law cited. Tutoring helps most with case law recall (which is heavy and granular), with the application technique that exam mark schemes reward explicitly, and with the longer essays that ask for evaluation and reform. School provision is uneven; tutors with LLB or LLM backgrounds, ideally with bar or solicitor experience, are the realistic standard. Match to the specific board's content.
AS-levels are the first-year sixth-form qualification (Year 12, age 16-17), taken as standalone qualifications worth half an A-level in subjects where students don't continue to A2. Since the 2015-2017 reforms decoupled AS from A-level in England, AS marks no longer count toward the A-level grade — students sit fresh A-level exams at the end of Year 13. Wales and Northern Ireland retained the older modular structure. Tutoring at AS focuses on consolidation through Year 12 to set up A-level success; in England, the AS exam itself is now optional and increasingly skipped. Confirm the actual route the student is on.
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About Law
What Law covers across UK levels, where tutoring usually helps, and what to look for in a tutor.
Exam boards
AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas, CCEA, SQA and Cambridge International — what each is known for.
Parent guides
Cost benchmarks, online vs in-person, when to start, choosing a tutor, and knowing if it's working.
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