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Bree received 83% on her Maths test and she was over the moon.Gemma, Mount Pritchard
Year 8 student Elena focused on interpreting column graphs for data analysis and simplifying algebraic expressions by collecting like terms, also practising angle relationships such as supplementary angles.
Year 7 student Madison worked through solving linear equations in one variable (solving for x) and reviewed exterior angles in triangles with targeted practice questions.
Meanwhile, Year 4 student Arabella developed her understanding of multiplication techniques using repeated addition and arrays, building a solid foundation for more advanced number work.
In Year 9 mathematics, she jumped straight to the answers and made mistakes, especially with negative numbers, as noted by her tutor.
Homework was sometimes incomplete or done in the wrong notebook, causing confusion and missed feedback opportunities.
In Year 5, avoiding multiplication tasks led to skipped practice and slow progress; she often tried to bypass hard questions without reading them fully ("refused to do her school homework...thinking it too hard").
Across Years 4–10, messy written work and inconsistent use of strategies meant calculation errors persisted—particularly when pressured or unconfident—leaving concepts like fractions and area formulas half-remembered at test time.
One Cabramatta West tutor saw a Year 11 student who used to freeze up with simultaneous equations now tackle bivariate data questions independently, even checking her work for errors—a big step from needing constant prompts.
In a recent session, a Year 8 student showed new initiative by re-opening her tutoring notebook mid-lesson to look up past fraction strategies instead of waiting for help, something she never tried before.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student who struggled with time-telling surprised her tutor by reading both analogue and digital clocks accurately without guidance and even drew the clock faces herself.