100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
My son understood exactly what Margaret taught him the other day, with which he was having a lot of problems with.Rebecca, Georges Hall
Year 11 student Sam revised standard mathematics topics including surface area and indices, with targeted practice on algebraic equations.
Another Year 11, Mia, worked through questions involving simple and compound interest as well as methods for rearranging formulae to isolate a specific variable.
For primary support, Year 4 student Jay focused on maths concepts like interpreting time phrases and reading analogue clocks, alongside building his English vocabulary by creating word lists with definitions and example sentences.
In Year 8 algebra, one student's written work was flagged as needing clearer presentation—brackets were often missed when multiplying negatives, which led to sign errors ("the presentation of answers needed improvement so as to be mathematically correct").
In Year 10 financial maths, a tendency emerged to attempt annuity problems before planning the approach, resulting in confusion about which formulas applied.
Meanwhile, a primary student found adding mixed numeral fractions difficult at first and hesitated to show working; only after guided practice did confidence grow.
In all cases, moments of hesitation or skipped steps made it harder to catch small mistakes early.
One Georges Hall tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to hesitate with complex algebra now working through factorisation and expansion questions right after a single demonstration, rarely needing extra help.
In Year 9, another student has begun asking clarifying questions when stuck—previously she would stay silent or guess—and recently solved percentage error and surface area problems without prompting.
Meanwhile, a younger student in primary school made a noticeable shift from struggling with decimals to answering decimal addition questions independently after just a few guided examples.