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Year 8 student Jessica focused on using the sine rule to find unknown side lengths and explored how the five-number summary connects to box-and-whisker plots, including calculating quartiles and spread.
In Year 10, James practised applying indices laws—including negative indices and converting between positive/negative forms—and solved complex logarithm problems involving addition, subtraction, and the change of base rule.
Meanwhile, a Year 11 session with Olivia centred on solving trigonometric equations for non-standard values and working through domain and range questions for log and exponential functions, using both radians and degrees where required.
A Year 10 student often hesitated to write out working for algebraic equations, leading to confusion when isolating variables and errors going unnoticed ("he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors").
In Year 11, a lack of organization—forgetting the calculator or not bringing completed homework—meant time was lost catching up instead of consolidating new concepts.
For a Year 7 learner, extracting key data from worded problems proved overwhelming; writing minimal notes made it harder to track reasoning and identify what information was missing. In those moments, confidence dipped as uncertainty grew.
One Belmont tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who used to get stuck on logarithms now confidently applies log and exponent rules in multi-step equations, even starting to do some calculations mentally.
In Year 9, another student has shifted from quietly following along to actively asking clarifying questions when something isn't clear—especially with trickier worded problems about time zones and linear graphs.
Meanwhile, a primary schooler who previously struggled with multiplication is now multiplying by powers of ten without hesitation and can recite the 11 times table up to three digits.