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Lessons are fantastic, it’s easy to understand.Cindy, Inala
Year 11 student Alexis worked through advanced exponentials and logarithms for an assignment, checking calculations and refining responses to meet assessment criteria.
In Year 10, Ben revised mean, median, mode, range, IQR and box plots using sample data sets in preparation for his upcoming exam.
Meanwhile, Year 12 student Sam focused on external exam prep by practicing short response questions involving derivatives and integrals (including trig and natural logs), as well as tackling growth/decay problem-solving with laws of logarithms.
In Year 12 Specialist Maths, one student repeatedly skipped lines in algebraic working, which led to mistakes that "hid sign errors and caused incorrect answers."
Another senior student delayed seeking help when overwhelmed by extended chemistry questions, resulting in rushed editing and tangential writing instead of meeting criteria.
In Year 8 maths, a student struggled to lay out work neatly and often felt lost when facing terminology-heavy problems—guidance on task order was needed for progress.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner's tendency to rush through money word problems without checking the actual question led her to answer with total cost rather than change given.
A tutor in Doolandella noticed that one Year 11 student, Gianna, has shifted from needing step-by-step support to now leading chemistry lessons by asking targeted questions and connecting ideas from previous assignments. She's even unpacking multi-mark questions independently and checking her own work for key requirements.
Meanwhile, Rohan (Year 10) is now consistently showing his full maths working with correct algebraic formatting—something he struggled with before. He has begun using precise terminology without prompting.
In primary, Mikaela recently counted out change and solved real-world money problems on her own after previously relying on reminders for each step.
It takes a lot to do well in biology. Moving up the curriculum can be a challenge and if students don't jump in with both feet it's easy to fall behind.