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Year 12 student Adam worked through the development and recognition of human rights, including their historical origins, focusing on key definitions and international legal measures.
In Year 12, Priya concentrated on advanced Business Studies topics such as marketing philosophies and the interconnected functions within a business, using real-world case studies to understand modern approaches like societal and relationship marketing.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Zara practised constructing exam-style responses for Legal Studies by applying crime definitions and exploring factors influencing criminal behaviour alongside elements of strict liability offences.
A Year 11 Business Studies student, despite improving in report writing, often avoided integrating case studies and statistics into responses—"he rarely included specific examples from research," noted one tutor. This habit made reports less persuasive under exam conditions.
In Year 8 Mathematics, a student tended to do algebra working mentally rather than on paper, so sign errors slipped by; "she just needs to keep practicing writing out her working out, instead of doing it all in her head."
Meanwhile, a Year 10 student struggled with organizing revision notes for polynomials and circle geometry—leaving these topics to last minute caused confusion when tackling harder exam-style questions.
A tutor in Box Hill noticed a Year 11 student who previously rushed through tasks now pausing to double-check his answers and catching errors himself during revision, which is a big shift from earlier sessions.
Another high schooler preparing for HSC exams recently started asking for extra practice questions on tricky Business Studies topics instead of waiting for prompts—demonstrating real initiative and independence.
Meanwhile, a Year 6 student who struggled with fractions last term now confidently explains how she divides and multiplies them within equations, even fixing "silly mistakes" before moving on to the next problem.