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Hi Tristan, Thank you for tutoring Macgregor, I have often found it difficult to motivate him to do homework and I have found your calm encouraging and persistent approach works very well with him. You are really great at keeping him engaged and focused at the same time, and work very well with him. You follow everything through in a sound, structured and well thought out way. I find your approach very professional. I have also found you very flexible and reliable and adapt to whatever Macgregor needs. Most importantly, Macgregor loves working with you and enjoys the way work with him. I look forward to seeing you continue to work with Macgregor next term.Sarah-Jane Fruin, Camden
Year 7 student Mason worked through worded problems involving one- and two-step equations as well as score and frequency tables, focusing on calculating mean, median, mode, and range.
In Year 10, Olivia tackled data analysis by reviewing dot plots and stem-and-leaf plots alongside practical work on financial mathematics concepts like wages and overtime pay.
For Year 12, Ethan concentrated on advanced calculus skills such as differentiation and integration of logarithmic functions, using recent exam questions to apply these methods in context.
In Year 8, a student did not review geometry before a test, which left her underprepared—"only had one week before," as the tutor observed.
In Year 11 Extension Maths, summary sheets were not made ahead of new content on primitive functions; missing this step slowed recall during lessons.
For a Year 9 lesson, homework set to consolidate understanding of logs and exponentials was left incomplete, so gaps remained undetected until next session.
In senior calculus (Year 12), an over-reliance on calculator routines meant "needs to work on recognising differentiation rules" by hand, stalling progress when unfamiliar curves appeared in practice papers.
One Elderslie tutor noted a big shift with a Year 10 student who used to get stuck on rearranging equations—she now independently chooses the right method and finishes all practice questions without prompting.
A Year 11 student, who previously hesitated to attempt tricky trig identities, recently volunteered to explain her approach aloud during their session and successfully proved two new identities solo.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student has started breaking up irregular shapes into smaller parts for area problems after initially needing step-by-step help; last lesson, he tackled the hardest shape in his workbook on his own.