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As soon as I enquired about tutoring for my daughter, Ezy Maths responded quickly and gave me all the information I needed. I love the one on one time that my daughter has face to face, I purposely choose a tutor that was not online, as my daughter has Dyscalculia, and needs support face to face support. My daughter loves it. And her tutor is super patient with her. I highly recommend Ezy Maths tutoring. P.S i live that there is no lock in contact.Samarah, Casula
Year 2 student Natalia worked on telling time to the hour and half-hour, and practiced basic division using visual aids like number lines.
Year 4 student Madeline focused on long division techniques and completed subtraction word problems, ensuring correct alignment of digits in written calculations.
Meanwhile, Year 3 student Charlie tackled multiplication with arrays and explored the concept of subject and predicate in English, also reading a chapter from "Bored" by Matt Stanton for comprehension practice.
Across the younger years, messy written layout—such as not aligning digits in addition and subtraction (Year 4 maths)—led to confusion and repeated errors, as noted: "she would get the wrong answers when the numbers are not aligning underneath each other."
In upper primary, one student hesitated to attempt long division without drawing groups or dots (Year 5), showing over-reliance on early-stage strategies rather than developing confidence with formal methods.
A Year 6 student skipped writing full working in multi-step word problems for area, making it hard to track mistakes. These habits left them spending extra time fixing old errors instead of moving forward confidently.
A Casula tutor noticed that one high school student, Madeline, used to struggle with long division but now solves multi-step problems independently and even explains her working out as she goes.
In another recent session, Charlie—a Year 7 student—began relying on multiplication tables from memory instead of drawing circles and dots for division, showing a real shift toward mental strategies.
Meanwhile, younger learner Maria, who was initially hesitant to use number lines for subtraction, now confidently selects between strategies depending on the problem and checks her answers herself before asking for help.
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.