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Olivia is very happy with Emmad and his teaching style.Julianne, Henley Beach South
Year 6 Emily revised long division by one and two digits with remainders, and explored basic chemistry concepts such as the periodic table's groups, periods, atomic mass, and charge.
In Year 11, Lucas worked through polynomial equality for cubics and quartics as well as tackling differentiation using first principles.
Meanwhile, Year 12 Alex focused on complex number arithmetic—including multiplication and division in polar form—and applied De Moivre's theorem to solve trigonometric algebra problems.
A Year 12 student working on calculus and induction tended to avoid writing out all steps, especially when "just practising series induction questions"—as one tutor noted, "he skipped showing steps in algebra, which hid sign errors." This led to small mistakes persisting between sessions.
In Year 10, messy or incomplete written work appeared in long multiplication: skipping intermediate lines caused confusion when reviewing answers.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner rushed through reading large numbers—"reads a little too quickly without recognising punctuation"—making it difficult to catch place value errors during practice. The habit left her unsure when estimating values from measuring devices.
One Fulham tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with polynomial multiplication now completing these problems quickly and without second-guessing, showing clear improvement in test readiness.
Another high schooler, previously unsure about ratio concepts, managed to answer questions independently during the session after struggling with similar homework just days before.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who rarely volunteered questions is now actively pointing out where she needs help in maths and has started asking for clarification on rounding—something she would have avoided earlier.