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My daughter is finding it easy to understand and learning different techniques, Grace is a lovely tutor and glad we were given her she is patient in her approach in teaching my daughter Savannah.Samantha
Year 7 student Tabitha worked on fractions, decimals, and percentages as a foundation for high school maths, followed by her first introduction to long division using step-by-step examples.
In Year 10, Thomas focused on measurement and geometry by solving surface area and volume problems for prisms and cylinders, then tackled quadratic equations through completing the square and identifying intercepts.
For Year 11, Sarah reviewed differentiation techniques such as finding stationary points and practiced sketching functions like logarithmic, exponential, and reciprocal graphs with an emphasis on interpreting key features.
In Year 9 mathematics, one student often solved equations in their head rather than writing out working, making it "a bit messy and hard for him or potential markers to see."
For a senior student tackling algebra, over-reliance on formula sheets slowed progress—"rule dependency" left gaps when under exam pressure.
Another senior struggled with planning answers to long worded questions, hesitating to put ideas on paper; as noted, "he can work on putting his ideas in written form with confidence."
In each case, these process issues led to lost marks or confusion mid-task.
One Elizabeth Hills tutor noted that Tabitha, starting Year 7 work, has begun to speak up when she's confused instead of staying silent—she now asks for help and works through mistakes rather than guessing.
In a recent high school session, a student who used to rush algebra problems is now pausing to back-check their solutions and spot errors independently.
Another win came from a Year 11 maths lesson: after struggling with sketching quadratic equations, the student can now lay out each step clearly and identify key features without prompting.
Last week, he chose to attempt an unfamiliar question on his own before asking for guidance.