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Agnes is great. After Agnes left, Zak spent the next two hours doing math problems in his book, which I have never seen him do voluntarily before. Agnes really boosted his confidence in a single session so we are very pleased. Thanks for pairing her with Zak. We were very impressed. Agnes is clearly a very smart young professional, and has a natural talent for teaching.Nathan
Year 12 student Hannah focused on advanced complex numbers, working through extended response questions and exploring year 12 exam-style problems.
For Year 11, Josh practised circular functions in Methods, applying them to graphing and real-world contexts, while also strengthening his skills with gradients and differentiation.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Emily covered physics topics such as displacement, velocity, and acceleration—using diagrams to connect equations with motion scenarios.
In Year 11 Physics, one student hesitated to attempt new force problems independently, relying on familiar textbook examples and avoiding more challenging scenarios.
"He needed prompting to try questions beyond the worked examples," a tutor noted, which meant fewer opportunities to adapt strategies when faced with unfamiliar cases.
Meanwhile, in Year 9 Maths, another student left several textbook exercises unfinished; missed practice led to confusion when double angle formulas appeared in later lessons.
In both cases, avoiding exposure to diverse problem types resulted in slower progress and less confidence when tackling assignments without support.
One Clarkefield tutor noticed a Year 11 student who, after weeks of hesitating during class discussions, now regularly asks for clarification on tricky physics questions instead of staying silent—especially when preparing for momentum tests.
In another session, a high schooler working on integration problems started tackling exam-style questions independently and even applied the double angle formula successfully, something he'd struggled to attempt previously.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student recently began attempting textbook maths problems by herself without prompting, having previously waited for each step to be explained before trying.