100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
Adeline is very patient and certainly knows how to engage well with our son.Kim
Year 7 student Raffy worked through calculating mean, median, and mode from data sets as well as comparing frequency tables and percentages for an assignment.
In Year 10, Lily focused on expanding and factorising algebraic expressions along with solving linear and simultaneous equations.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sam analysed market failures by examining externalities and abuse of market power, plus discussed producer surplus and consumer surplus in the context of efficient markets.
A Year 10 student arrived without her textbook or graph book, so lesson time was lost gathering materials and she struggled to engage fully with the set problems.
In Year 12 Chemistry, missing units in final answers—such as leaving out "kJ" on enthalpy calculations—meant reworking otherwise correct solutions.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student avoided writing full working for simultaneous equations ("just wrote the answer at first," noted the tutor), which led to confusion when reviewing errors.
A younger learner sometimes resisted asking clarifying questions, relying on hints rather than addressing uncertainties directly; this slowed her progress through unfamiliar topics.
A Brown Hill Creek tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who, after previously hesitating to speak up, has begun actively asking clarifying questions about financial maths and now takes the initiative to plan out her approach before tackling new problems.
Another high school student received teacher feedback on her economics essay and, instead of feeling discouraged as she had in earlier terms, used the comments to revise her assignment independently—her teacher highlighted significant improvement in both structure and argument.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 learner who once needed prompting with multiplication now solves large-number problems mostly unaided, finishing all ten practice questions correctly without hints.
It takes a lot to do well in biology. Moving up the curriculum can be a challenge and if students don't jump in with both feet it's easy to fall behind.