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I really like Nicholas and my daughter seems keen to continue which is great.Tina, Mosman
Year 5 student Charlotte focused on units of measurement by converting between millimetres, centimetres, metres, and kilometres, and explored the difference between volume and area for various 3D shapes.
For Year 8, Olivia worked through algebraic equations involving bracket expansion and practiced simplifying expressions with numbers in the denominator.
Meanwhile, Year 9 student Ben tackled solving linear equations for x—including questions that involved combining like terms—and practiced working with inequalities on number lines, including remembering to flip the sign when multiplying or dividing by a negative.
In Year 5, one student was hesitant to attempt Olympiad questions independently, waiting for guidance instead of trying strategies alone; as a tutor observed, "she didn't know where to start and needed prompting before attempting solutions."
In Year 7 algebra, another avoided writing out full working, which led to missed negatives in multi-step equations.
A Year 10 student struggled with organization—falling behind on homework meant less class time could be spent tackling new or challenging problems.
During Year 12 revision, incomplete notes made it difficult to review exam topics efficiently, so critical feedback from marked tasks wasn't always taken up in future work.
A tutor in Cremorne noticed that one high school student, Sienna, who previously struggled with negative numbers, now confidently solves equations involving both positive and negative values and can explain the reasoning behind each rule—a big step from needing constant guidance.
In another session, Stephanie began asking for clarification when creative writing tasks felt unclear rather than staying silent or guessing; she's also started trying new writing approaches on her own initiative.
Meanwhile, Year 3 student Theo made a shift from guessing coin combinations to methodically working out dollar and cent problems by himself—he finished his lesson accurately combining complex amounts without prompting.