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All is going wonderfully & Luke is way ahead of his class now!Matilda, Parafield Gardens
Year 5 student Tom worked on understanding time by reading analogue clocks and practicing addition and subtraction with decimals, while also strengthening recall of the 5 times tables.
In Year 10, Leticia focused on starting her maths investigation assignment by brainstorming and planning a comparative analysis of authors' earnings, developing her approach to research-based problem solving.
For Year 11, Alexis caught up on biology content missed due to illness, covering the basics of homeostasis and tolerance limits—what they are and their importance for living systems.
In Year 9 maths, one student hesitated to ask questions and lacked confidence applying skills like division and factorisation, especially when tackling new problem types—"She missed some foundational steps from her school's pathways," a tutor noted.
Meanwhile, a Year 11 student relied heavily on calculators for multiplication and felt lost with worded problems; this dependence made it difficult to build fluency in arithmetic without digital aids.
In Year 12 physics, another student sometimes forgot to include units or convert to SI form before substituting values into equations, which led to small calculation errors during multi-step questions.
One Globe Derby Park tutor recently noticed a Year 11 student who had previously hesitated with trigonometry now confidently working through unknown angle problems on her own after only a single demonstration—a huge shift from her earlier reluctance to even attempt these questions.
In another high school session, a student who struggled to connect "completing the square" to graphing quadratic equations was able to link the two and solve both types of problems by the end of their lesson.
Meanwhile, a younger student who often rushed through addition has begun pausing to check for "carried" values, finishing all ten sums without missing any steps this time.