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Quickly connected me with a tutor in my area for my son in year 11 Maths methods. The tutor (Dylan) is great, very knowledgable, and really takes the time to work with my son on his problem areas. Our school schedule is changing all the time and Dylan has been very accommodating when we have had to move times, which has been a big relief. I've also been getting great feedback from EzyMath and my tutor on my sons progress, which has helped me to understand how to support him with homework better too. I definitely recommend EzyMath to anyone looking for a tutor!Brad, Boronia
Year 5 student Chloe focused on mastering fraction operations and converting between improper and mixed fractions, using number lines to build confidence.
For Year 8, Noah worked through linear relations—plotting equations and interpreting gradients—as well as algebraic expansion and factorisation.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Ava tackled the turning point form of parabolic graphs alongside basic trigonometry concepts, practising with diagrams to visualise problems.
In Year 11 English, one student repeatedly submitted homework late or incomplete; as noted, "there have been multiple times that he has not completed his homework on time," making it difficult to build consistent essay-writing skills.
During Year 10 Maths revision, another student relied heavily on familiar techniques and hesitated when asked to apply concepts in new ways—this slowed problem-solving and reduced confidence under test conditions.
In Year 3, a student's multiplication work was often unfinished, with skipped practice on timetables leading to slower progress when tackling multi-step problems.
These moments left students feeling unprepared and hesitant during class discussions.
A tutor in Ferntree Gully noticed one Year 11 student, who used to rely heavily on hints, now confidently completes trigonometry problems without a calculator and can explain her steps out loud.
In Year 9, another student made a real shift: after weeks of silent guessing, she has begun raising her hand for help whenever she gets stuck on linear equations—asking for help rather than moving on confused.
Meanwhile, during a recent primary session, a younger student who'd struggled with fractions earlier in the term managed to solve mixed-number addition independently for the first time.