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Eloise is doing very well with Luca and MathsJohn, Keperra
Year 4 student Lily focused on division and multiplication using single-digit numbers, practicing with a mix of word problems and number sentences.
In Year 10, Jack worked through trigonometric identities to solve equations and also completed exercises involving basic matrix operations.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Emily explored vectors by calculating scalar projections and dot products, applying these to questions about magnitude and angles.
A Year 10 student often arrived without books or materials, so the session started with searching for resources instead of learning.
In Year 12 Specialist Maths, notes lacked detail and context—one tutor observed, "despite having significantly more notes than before, these notes lacked context and detail," making revision confusing before tests.
A younger student (Year 3) repeatedly counted on fingers for basic addition and became frustrated during division tasks; this slowed progress and reduced confidence mid-lesson.
For one senior assignment, no new work had been completed a week out from deadline, leaving little time to seek feedback or refine responses.
A tutor in Ferny Grove recently noticed some genuine shifts: a Year 11 student who previously avoided speaking up began actively asking questions and even brought a notebook filled with detailed notes—something he'd never done before.
In a Year 7 session, the student arrived prepared with specific class questions and tackled her assignment independently, where she used to wait for step-by-step guidance.
Meanwhile, one primary student who had always counted on fingers is now solving base-10 addition problems mentally without prompting. Last week, that same student finished all ten problems without needing to stop for help.
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.