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Year 9 Jonas reviewed algebra concepts and perimeter for both regular and irregular shapes, then worked through an angles worksheet with extension into angle types.
Year 8 Jamie focused on comparing and simplifying fractions, followed by work on percentages, decimals, and how they relate to fractions.
For Year 10 Jonas, lessons included statisticsâsuch as five-number summary analysisâand extending algebra skills using targeted worksheets.
A Year 10 student, when working through trigonometry and statistics tasks, sometimes left diagrams or graphs missing key labelsâone note read, "Remember to write the title for x & y axis & Dun forget to write '0' in the left bottom corner."
In a Year 8 algebra lesson, calculation errors crept in because handwritten numbers (especially 0 and 6) were hard to distinguish; confusion led to time wasted double-checking their own work.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student often hesitated on multi-step worded problems, showing less confidence and skipping answer checks after finishing. This resulted in avoidable errors persisting across sessions.
One Cremorne tutor noticed a big shift with a Year 11 student who used to struggle with statistics; after three weeks reviewing quartiles and box plots, he now finds Q1, median, and Q3 quickly and accurately without prompts.
Meanwhile, a Year 9 student who was hesitant to ask for help has started actively decoding complex algebra word problems on her own and confidently checks her process aloud as she works.
In primary, one Year 6 student recently figured out the formula for the area of a parallelogram himself after an initial explanationâsomething he'd found confusing before.