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Chloe is absolutely the perfect match for our daughter!!! She loves being taught by Chloe and she is actually learning the basic maths skills that she should have learnt at school years ago! She even wants to to have tutoring by Chloe in the school holidays- we can't believe how well she has responded to Chloe and we are absolutely thrilled!!Brianna
Year 3 Claudia worked on addition with hundreds using the split strategy and was introduced to subtraction involving tens from different numbers.
For Year 8 Zoe, the lesson focused on simplifying algebraic expressions using index laws and expanding brackets via the distributive law, often with step-by-step written examples.
Meanwhile, Year 9 James tackled right triangle problems by applying Pythagoras's theorem and practised forming and solving linear equations in y = mx + b format from worded scenarios.
Several process-related challenges stood out across grades.
A Year 8 student repeatedly did not complete homework, leaving gaps in algebra and percentage skills unaddressed—"he has not completed his homework multiple times now," a tutor noted, meaning missed opportunities to practice independently.
In Year 11, over-reliance on calculators prevented the development of essential mental math and pattern recognition, especially during algebraic simplification.
For a Year 4 student, hesitation with basic times tables persisted despite correct reasoning; this lack of confidence slowed recall under pressure.
At senior level, one learner avoided writing out working for multi-step trigonometry problems, which led to confusion when rearranging equations and hindered progress during complex tasks.
A tutor in Chain Valley Bay noticed a Year 8 student who previously hesitated with algebraic word problems now attempts them without prompting and is quicker at expanding expressions than before.
In a recent high school session, another student began recalling trigonometric ratios independently, having needed frequent reminders in the past; he also started to spot patterns when re-arranging equations like y = mx + b.
Meanwhile, a Year 3 learner who used to rely on help for multiplication has begun using an expansion method on her own initiative and now solves times tables questions unaided, even when they're shuffled.