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Year 7 student Hayley focused on converting mixed numbers to improper fractions and then practiced quick mental addition, subtraction, and multiplication.
In Year 8, James tackled linear inequalities and straight-line graphing, extending into finding midpoints and distances between points.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Lewis worked on exponential functions and logarithms, applying them to real-life problems for deeper understanding.
A Year 3 student showed ongoing reliance on visual aids and flashcards for times tables, recalling answers quickly only when prompts were available. When asked orally (e.g., "2 x 7"), she hesitated or struggled to answer without these supports—she performs very well, almost instantly, when we use them, whereas, if we're doing purely oral exercises, it is a bit harder for her. This meant the transition from visual memory to independent recall was incomplete.
In Year 9 mathematics, one student rarely labeled triangle sides or wrote out working in geometry tasks; skipping this step led to confusion about orientation and errors in problem-solving that took extra time to untangle.
Another senior student hesitated to ask questions during lessons—even when unsure—mirroring his classroom experience; this limited his engagement and left misunderstandings unresolved as he moved through algebraic techniques.
A tutor in Hawker noticed that a Year 9 student, Jensen, has started consistently asking for help when stuck on graphing problems—something he avoided early on—which meant he prepared specific questions to discuss at the start of sessions.
In senior maths, Callan (Year 12) recently built on his understanding of gradients and is now able to apply the power rule accurately without prompting.
Meanwhile, Evie (Year 4) showed new independence by using homemade flashcards to master her 6 and 7 times tables, answering every card correctly during review.