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It seems to be going very well. Hasna says Leticia's explanations are in-depth and comprehensive, which she feels she really needed. She even talked through some of the study strategies from one of the emails with my husband today!Helena, Acacia Ridge
Year 8 student Layla focused on combinations and probability, as well as tackling some proof questions she'd prepared.
In Year 10, Ethan worked through bivariate data concepts including correlation and regression ahead of an upcoming exam, using practice questions for consolidation.
Meanwhile, a Year 6 student addressed simplifying ratios before moving on to operations with fractions, practising both simplifying and multiplying them for homework support.
A Year 9 student often avoided reviewing feedback on quiz errors—"he did not attempt to understand why he got wrong for the quizzes"—so misunderstandings in finance and compound interest lingered into later sessions.
In Year 11, a lack of neatness in note-taking meant that formula mistakes during integration and differentiation were harder to spot; as one tutor put it, "the notebook is not well maintained."
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student skipped drawing working when faced with worded algebra problems, leading to confusion over which formulas applied and missing marks for reasoning.
Each instance left gaps that slowed progress in subsequent lessons.
One Archerfield tutor noticed a real shift with a Year 11 student who used to skip over tricky physics topics; this time, he tackled Young's double-slit experiment questions on his own and only needed help after trying first.
A Year 9 student, who had struggled with negative numbers in earlier sessions, now paused to check her work rather than rushing ahead—she even corrected her own mistakes without prompting.
In primary maths, one girl began inventing shortcuts for perimeter problems instead of waiting for hints, proudly explaining her logic as she finished the last question independently.