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Alexa is wonderful she's kind friendly patient and very reliable she is the perfect math tutor for my daughter thank you Alexa you are amazing :)Donna
Year 4 student Saanvi worked on comparing and ordering fractions with the same denominator, interpreted fraction meanings in real-life contexts, and practised finding ratios using unit conversions.
For Year 10, Phoebe focused on revising index laws and applying them to exam-style questions.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Tom tackled exponential growth and decay as new content and solved additional problems involving irrational numbers.
A Year 9 student, when working on quadratic factorising, often relied on notes rather than recalling rules independently; as one tutor observed, "she needed reminders for each step instead of trying from memory."
In a senior session, another student avoided surface area worded problems, choosing to repeat familiar exponential drills instead—this meant less growth in multi-step reasoning.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner guessed division answers rather than showing working, which hid small errors and slowed progress with remainders.
Across both primary and high school sessions, unfinished practice questions sometimes left concepts only partially reinforced by the end of the lesson.
A tutor in Fyansford recently noticed some real turning points with students at different year levels.
In Year 9, a student who used to freeze up over large numbers tackled complex ratio problems without hesitation and even started coming up with creative algebra solutions on her own.
During a high school session on exponential growth and decay, another student went from confusion about compound interest to solving practice questions independently—she now requests tougher examples for extra challenge.
Meanwhile, a younger student who previously lost focus during maths sessions has begun showing steady attention and finishes bookwork before asking what's next.
Chemistry can seem a bit technical. It's all abstract formulas and content that seems impossible to learn and barely manageable to memorise. The material keeps piling up and how are students supposed to truly learn anything when they're constantly missing something and falling behind?
And it's not only about the grades. Sure, students who struggle with chemistry want to pass that test and get their grades up. It's usually their only end goal and that's completely understandable. However, we've found that once students start catching up and chemistry doesn't seem like such an enormous hurdle, their self-confidence improves as well.
When they have someone to guide them, make sense of the clutter of information and demands, students tend to struggle less in other areas as well. Your child could feel less anxious about tests and their performance, learn how to tackle tough situations and become more independent, all with the help of a local chemistry tutor in Fyansford.
Ready to give tutoring a try? This is how it works.
We match you with a local tutor who offers chemistry tutoring in Fyansford, right where you live. What you pay is a simple hourly rate, no other pesky charges or fees, and if you're not completely happy with the first lesson no need to worry - it comes as a trial and is completely free.
All we need is to have a quick chat and we can set things up for you.
So give us a call!
1300 312 354