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Georgia is absolutely loving her tutor, I am very impressed with her myself, she is a lovely young lady.Nicole, Gulfview Heights
Year 9 student Kiran tackled quadratics by sketching graphs and practising factorisation methods, focusing on solving for x.
Year 10 student Ava reviewed key finance concepts, working through simple and compound interest as well as superannuation calculations.
Meanwhile, Year 4 student Sam worked on understanding common unit fractions and calculating discounts in real-life money problems.
In Year 8 mathematics, Joanne sometimes skips writing out her working, which made it harder to spot where sign errors crept in during algebra and fractions.
In several senior lessons, she hesitated with questions that were worded differently from those practiced—leading to confusion about what the question actually required.
At a primary level, homework was often incomplete or forgotten ("forgets to do homework"), and work on time-telling tasks showed repeated errors when minutes varied (e.g., moving from 5:45 to 8:15).
These patterns left gaps unaddressed before new material arrived.
A tutor in Gulfview Heights noticed that Joanne, a Year 10 student, now chooses the right factorisation technique on her own and corrects small mistakes as she works—just weeks ago, she'd hesitate and wait for prompts.
Another high school session saw Joanne applying new finance formulas straight after learning them, moving from confusion about simple versus compound interest to solving real-world problems without extra help.
In a primary session, one younger student who used to rely heavily on hints now reads out loud independently and can spot her own errors before the tutor steps in.
For most students, biology doesn't seem that hard. The content isn't that intimidating and if you put in the time, more often than not results will follow.