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I am so happy for the tutor you sent us he was a lovely young man and my son related to him very well.Jill, Patterson Lakes
Year 8 student Max focused on solving quadratic equations using factorising and completing the square, also practising how to find x-intercepts on graphs.
Year 9 Daniel worked through composite shapes for area calculations and revised Pythagoras' Theorem with diagrams to visualise solutions.
For Year 10, Olivia tackled financial maths topics including calculating percentage profit and loss as well as taxable income and deductions, using real-world scenarios to apply formulas.
A Year 8 student showed messy, hard-to-follow working when solving algebraic equations; as a tutor noted, "overall neatness in work can be improved to help increase speed and accuracy of answers."
In Year 11, over-reliance on the calculator during a test led to confusion with graphing tasks—working without aids exposed gaps in process recall.
A primary student struggled to break down multi-step worded questions, often hesitating when identifying key information, which slowed progress.
Meanwhile, one senior student avoided revisiting teacher feedback on quadratic basics, leaving misconceptions unaddressed for another session.
In these moments, frustration or hesitation sometimes replaced confident problem-solving.
A Bonbeach tutor noticed Atticus, a high school student, has moved from confusion to confidently graphing polynomials and drawing sign diagrams independently—something he struggled with earlier in the term.
Another high schooler, Daniel, previously hesitant with algebraic manipulation, now completes "completing the square" problems without prompts and has started getting correct answers on his revision work.
For a younger student, Asha's recent sessions have seen her finish two full worksheets in one go for the first time; she used to lose focus halfway through but now works steadily right to the end of each task.