100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
I was looking for a tutor for my child and found it complicated and confusing looking online at all the different options. I also didn't know if I could trust these people that weren't in a company. I found EzyMath and was very pleased with their level of communication. My child was matched with a very friendly, professional tutor. She gave my child confidence very quickly and I have seen my childs school marks go up so much the teacher asked me what we were doing at home. I highly recommend Ezymath.Simone, Bundoora
Year 12 student Bailey worked through mean, median, and mode as well as standard deviation and interquartile range for statistics, often applying these concepts to real data sets.
Another Year 12 student revised vector functions and prepared for an upcoming SAC on vectors, with particular attention to notation and application problems.
Meanwhile, Year 9 student covered indices and logarithms in detail, solving a range of practice questions to build confidence before moving onto exponential equations.
In Year 12 Methods, one student's "rigid" approach meant he missed alternative strategies when questions didn't match his expectations, as a tutor noted: "if the question didn't specify to use something, he often won't think of it himself."
For another senior student, juggling four different textbooks left him struggling to connect ideas—during tests, this scattershot method caused confusion and made recall harder.
Meanwhile, in Year 8 algebra revision, an over-focus on practical problems led to neglected fundamentals; key concepts slipped through the cracks because less familiar topics were avoided.
On high-pressure exam days, moments of panic compounded errors rather than resolving them.
A Bundoora tutoring session recently highlighted Bailey's progress in high school maths—he's now independently identifying errors in textbook answers, a step up from when he would simply accept solutions without question.
Another tutor noted that Noah, also in high school, has begun bridging gaps between concepts and is more willing to attempt challenging problems instead of skipping them as he used to.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student surprised their tutor by tackling multi-step word problems on their own after previously needing every step explained.
Last week, Bailey chose to work solo on new material and managed all ten questions without prompting.