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Tutoring is going very well she's starting to show some progress now which is good and Deanna works her hard which is great.Christine, Beacon Hill
Year 9 student Zac revised area formulas for rectangles, parallelograms, and triangles before applying Pythagoras' Theorem to mixed problems.
Year 10 student Mia worked on converting between fractions, percentages, and decimals as well as graphing linear equations using both algebraic and visual methods.
For Year 11, Josh tackled geometric sequences and series along with rates of change in motion questions, focusing on applying formulas to real-life scenarios.
A Year 8 student showed impatience in algebra, often rushing to answers and skipping necessary steps—"gets easily stressed and skips easy steps," a tutor noted—which led to repeated errors in sign changes.
In Year 11, one student avoided writing out working for trigonometric equations, making it harder to spot index mistakes or simplify expressions.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student tended to guess rather than use known strategies when asked about shapes and their properties, spending more time on trial-and-error than on reasoning through the problem. This guessing meant less practice with structured approaches and slower progress on new concepts.
A tutor in Brookvale noticed a Year 10 student who previously rushed through algebra now takes time to check each step, catching errors that used to slip by.
Another high schooler has started asking for more challenging calculus problems after mastering the chain rule last session—a big shift from earlier reluctance with differentiation.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who used to freeze up on times tables now volunteers answers and even tries out new multiplication strategies without prompting.
In their latest lesson, she completed all her practice questions independently for the first time.