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Marysa has been tutoring my 17 year old son for 1 year, and now also using her for tutoring my 15 year old daughter. Rapport was quickly established between each of them, which is not difficult due to Marysa's maturity, knowledge, respect, and her unwavering support to each child. Every single lesson is met with a bubbly, up beat, and smiling tutor. The advancement in my children's skills, knowledge, and confidence is immeasurable. After a difficult start to finding the correct fit with a tutor, we have been provided a jewel with Marysa.Rachelle, Seacliff
Year 4 student Ella revised multiples of 3 and practiced area and perimeter calculations for both regular and irregular shapes.
Year 6 student Lucas worked on comparing decimal numbers to three places, explored improper fractions versus mixed numbers, and practiced expressing decimals as fractions using visual aids.
Meanwhile, Year 7 student Max tackled NAPLAN numeracy practice questions with calculator use, focusing on relationships between fractions, decimals, and percentages alongside key fraction terminology and equivalence.
In Year 5 maths, one student repeatedly skipped labeling headings on place value boards ("hundredths to Hundred Thousands"), making it difficult to organize decimal work.
During a Year 8 algebra session, a notebook was left at home—so examples were jotted on loose scraps and later misplaced.
In English (Year 7), over-erasing and correcting narrative drafts led to lost ideas and slower progress; as noted: "She erased sentences so often her story stalled mid-way."
For Year 11 problem-solving, working only familiar fraction drills meant multi-step worded questions remained unsolved—confidence dropped after repeated setbacks in class discussions.
A tutor in Brighton noted that Brooke, a high school student, moved from relying on instructions to independently constructing triangles using a compass and reasoning through the process herself.
In another session, Prajna (Year 8) initially hesitated with index notation but quickly picked up the concept and solved calculator-based problems without prompting.
Meanwhile, Jye in Year 5 shifted from rushing homework to taking time for self-correction—he now pauses to re-read texts and uses decoding strategies when faced with unfamiliar words. Last week, he completed all spelling activities and set out his decimal calculations more clearly than before.