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I highly recommend Ezy Math Tutoring. Initially it took some time finding the right tutor for my daughter but the communication was always very open and prompt. I was given constant up dates on the progress which was great. My daughter clicked very well with her tutor and felt comfortable with her from day 1. I was expecting quite a few lessons in order for her to feel comfortable but it didn't take long at all. Chloe does a lot of preparation in her own time too and has given my daughter valuable tips on referencing and exam prep. I'm very happy with Chloe and more importantly my daughter is.Kelly, Caroline Springs
Year 12 student Stefan focused on converting complex numbers between Cartesian and polar forms, including multiplication, division in polar form, and solving equations using De Moivre's theorem, with rough sketches to visualise solutions.
In Year 11, Adam worked through describing numerical data and creating dot plots and stem plots as part of statistics.
Meanwhile, a Year 8 student tackled linear equations in word problems and practiced constructing tables to draw linear graphs from given equations.
In Year 10 mathematics, a student's written work was often messy—particularly when tackling complex algebra—making it hard to trace steps and spot where errors occurred. As one tutor noted, "he tries too hard to skip steps and is prone to making mistakes."
In VCE-level revision, another student relied mainly on familiar problems, hesitating to attempt challenging VCAA exam questions, which limited exposure to new problem types.
Meanwhile, a Year 6 student frequently forgot homework or arrived without necessary materials for multiplication practice, leading to gaps in recall during lessons and visible frustration when results fell short of expectations.
One Caroline Springs tutor recently noticed a big shift in a Year 11 student who previously hesitated to speak up when stuck; now, he clearly points out struggles on graphs, which helps him get the right support and work through tricky concepts faster.
Another high schooler managed to outline three arguments with clear topic sentences for an English task, after struggling to organise ideas last term.
In primary, one student—who used to forget multiplication steps—has started recalling the full table from 1 to 5 and catches up with new methods more quickly than before.