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We could not be happier with Mandar he is very pleasant to deal with, always on time and very good with the Khai, Piper and Chase.Roxanne
Year 11 student Bertina worked through mathematical induction problems and revisited challenging questions from the CSSA 2024 maths advanced HSC paper, with a focus on refining her proof techniques.
For Year 12, James practised complex numbers by tackling roots of unity as well as exploring advanced vector applications in three dimensions.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Maya revised financial mathematics concepts—calculating compound interest and interpreting results—and strengthened her understanding of fractions and decimals using practical examples.
Forgot to complete the two homework questions set out the previous week. This gap meant less exposure to new problem types before lessons.
In Year 11 Extension Maths, written working was often too brief—key steps were skipped in proofs, making it hard to pinpoint errors. Her step-by-step reasoning occasionally skipped crucial justifications.
One senior student avoided showing working for fear of mistakes during graphing tasks; this slowed feedback and improvement.
During exam revision in Year 12, over-reliance on past papers led to neglect of unfamiliar question types, leaving certain advanced concepts under-practiced.
One Annangrove tutor noticed a Year 11 student, who used to feel overwhelmed by exam-style maths questions, now independently working through past trial papers and even tackling harder calculus and sequences problems she'd previously avoided.
In a recent high school session, another student showed a real shift—she started asking clarifying questions as soon as confusion hit, rather than staying quiet and guessing like before.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who struggled with fractions last term is now choosing different strategies to solve fraction and decimal problems without prompting from the tutor.