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Siena started with Sambika yesterday and they are a great match. Sambika is exactly what Siena needs.Alison
Year 7 student Georgia worked on applying Pythagoras' theorem to right-angled triangles and explored basic trigonometry concepts like SOH CAH TOA.
In Year 10, Ethan focused on revising index laws and surds, then moved on to solving quadratic expressions using textbook questions.
For Year 12, Olivia practiced differentiating functions with the chain and quotient rules, followed by tackling anti-differentiation problems to find areas under curves between two points.
For a Year 11 student in Methods, the habit of skipping steps—especially when integrating trigonometric functions—meant "sometimes skips a step or goes too quickly," causing small errors that slowed progress on more complex problems.
Meanwhile, a Year 9 student repeatedly forgot to bring essential materials like her calculator and maths books home, making it difficult to track classwork and fully participate in targeted revision.
In English for Year 8, slow note-taking limited the ground covered during lessons; as one tutor noted, "this can hinder the amount of content covered in class."
Each scenario left less time for mastering new concepts or building confidence.
A tutor in Breakwater recently noticed some great shifts in how students tackle their work. One Year 11 student, after previously needing step-by-step support with differentiation, started identifying key elements independently on past exam questions and used her calculator to solve new problems—a big change from relying on hints.
In Year 9, a student who used to avoid tough algebra now openly asks for harder questions and compiles her own summary notes before tests, showing new initiative.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who was hesitant about frequency tables picked up the method quickly after some practice and completed all tasks without prompting.