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After expressing my interest in getting a maths tutor I received a very friendly phone call from a lady called Gemma. She asked me for my preferences regarding a tutor and linked me with someone in my area. My maths tutor (Dushyant) then rang me and arranged a first lesson. He was professional, friendly and had already done some preparation into the exam that I was studying for. I really appreciated the fact that he already knew what the perimeters and skill level of the exam, so that he could then work towards this level during our lessons. He always came well prepared and was interested in helping me, even during the week when I got stuck with a question. I feel more confident about sitting the exam now and have definitely learnt a lot in only one month.Ronja Schneller, Deception Bay
Year 10 student Jack worked through simplifying and expanding algebraic expressions, explored Pascal's triangle and the binomial theorem, and began an introduction to state changes and moles in chemistry.
In Year 11, Emily practised solving trigonometric equations and modelled trig functions using transformations and the unit circle.
Meanwhile, Year 8 student Liam focused on calculating mean, median, mode, and understanding class limits in statistics.
In Year 8 maths, one student's written work was described as needing clearer setting out—steps in calculations were hard to follow, making it easy to mix up positives and negatives.
A senior student preparing for trig equations (Year 11) left some revision incomplete, with the tutor noting "some work to catch up on."
In Year 5 numeracy, over-reliance on mental calculation led to confusion with times tables: "Needs more practice with tables would speed things along."
During a recent test, another high schooler struggled under pressure and didn't use feedback from earlier sessions. Confidence slipped when answers weren't found quickly.
One Deception Bay tutor noticed a Year 11 student who, after switching to general maths, now participates more actively and is even working ahead of class—a big shift from her previous hesitation.
In a recent session with a Year 8 student, the tutor saw him set his own study goals for the first time and stick to them throughout their work together.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner who used to stay quiet during lessons has started offering her own examples to solve, showing she's becoming more comfortable thinking out loud.
Last week, that same primary student completed every revision question without prompting.