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Year 7 student Devang focused on identifying and constructing simple, compound, and complex sentences using examples from "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," as well as practising correct plural and singular noun use during editing tasks.
For Year 10, Kana worked on reviewing essay structure for ATAR English by revising paragraph organisation and participating in spelling quizzes with self-correction to improve commonly misspelled words.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Yuhan practised fraction arithmetic—including multiplication and division—and briefly explored introductory concepts in quadratic equations along with some geometry problems.
Several students across both primary and secondary years struggled with organization, such as forgetting to bring the correct notebook or vocabulary lists (Year 8 English: "Brought different notebook than usual. Had a chat… about making sure to have all his work ready for the session"), and not completing or misplacing homework (Year 9: "informed me he lost his book as well as his homework… looked for it for about 3 minutes and couldn't find it").
In senior years, time management during assessments was an issue; one ATAR student planned to review a failed exam after missing key details under pressure.
Inconsistent use of punctuation and editing—especially commas and tense—in essay writing frequently slowed progress, often requiring significant prompting ("needed help to remember what tense he was writing in").
Over-correction due to second-guessing led some students to erase correct answers repeatedly during maths revision (Year 7: "often erases answers, even though they are right, because she overthinks them or questions herself"). This hesitation sometimes left questions unfinished within set time limits.
One Darling Downs tutor recently saw a Year 9 student who used to rush through her reading slow down and catch mistakes when prompted, showing much more careful attention than before.
In another high school session, a Year 10 student who once hesitated to ask for help now actively speaks up when unsure about a word's meaning and uses context clues to figure things out.
Meanwhile, a younger student in Year 5, after struggling with spelling quizzes, managed to improve from 5 correct to 20 this time—and completed his "Great Barrier Reef" activity entirely on his own.