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Callan is extremely happy with Amandi, he is even sitting and doing extra work.Davina, Dundas
Year 5 student Jessica worked on converting decimals to mixed numbers and practiced changing mixed numbers back to decimals, focusing on using division for more complex fractions.
In Year 9, Daniel tackled trigonometry by applying the sine and cosine rules to solve bearings problems and completed a topic test that included finding unknown angles.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sam reviewed differentiation using both the chain rule and product rule, concentrating on calculus techniques for upcoming assessments.
In Year 8 algebra, skipping working steps—"he just wrote the answer without showing his method," as a tutor noted—made it harder to spot where sign errors crept in.
A Year 10 student tackled trigonometric identities but hesitated to try questions unless absolutely certain, erasing partial attempts and avoiding visible mistakes.
Meanwhile, in a Year 5 session on multi-digit multiplication, messy layout meant numbers were misaligned and carried digits were lost mid-calculation.
These habits slowed progress during revision and led to repeated confusion when reviewing past work or correcting misunderstandings in class.
One Clyde tutor noted that Jessica, a Year 11 student, had previously struggled with calculus concepts but now independently applies the chain rule and quotient rule to complete differentiation problems correctly.
In another recent session, Elissa (Year 10) shifted from needing step-by-step guidance in statistics to confidently attempting all questions alone, especially when checking for direct proportion in data sets.
Meanwhile, Katelyn in Year 5 used to avoid complex worded maths problems, but last week she broke down multi-step multiplication tasks herself and finished every question without skipping any steps or asking for hints.