100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
I had immediate replies to my first application for a tutor and regular updates as this progressed. I was able to get in contact with staff with any questions quickly, and felt very confident and comfortable with the whole process. The tutor was efficient in his introduction and subsequent messages on the start date, time and what was required of him. The tutor was professional, very helpful and the whole journey has been a positive experience for my grandson. We can see results already and its only been a month along. Can't thank you enough. We are extremely satisfied in all aspects of this tutoring.anna coxon
Year 9 student Alyssia focused on titrations and titration equations, applying molar ratio calculations and rearranging formulas for chemistry; another Year 9, Mason, worked through coordinate geometry by graphing points in all four quadrants and identifying if given coordinates belong on a specific line.
For Year 10, Daniel revised indices with exam-style practice questions and also reviewed laws of exponents. Meanwhile, Year 11 student Lucas concentrated on financial maths concepts like simple interest and began direct practice with real-world problem sets.
In Year 8 algebra, one student skipped showing steps in working, which made it hard to spot sign errors and meant time was lost tracking back over answers.
In Year 11 chemistry, a student relied heavily on formula sheets instead of recalling methods independently during molar ratio questions—this slowed problem-solving when unfamiliar variations appeared.
Several primary students (Years 3–5) repeatedly left homework incomplete; for example, subtraction review and times tables were often not finished or brought to lessons.
A Year 7 learner's tendency toward messy handwriting sometimes led to confusion when rechecking geometry work, making error correction frustrating.
A tutor in Forest Range noticed a Year 11 student who previously made frequent "silly errors" during algebra and variable work has begun catching these mistakes before submitting answers, showing real improvement in attention to detail.
Another high schooler, after struggling with titration equations, recently completed mixed molar ratio problems independently for the first time.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who used to wait for prompts now volunteers strategies when tackling subtraction—last week she explained her working aloud without hesitation and finished her homework unassisted.