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Very easy to get started, with continued support. Would recommendNicole Coaker, Karrinyup
Year 6 Ben worked on translating and reflecting shapes in the coordinate plane, as well as collecting variables and solving linear equations from worded problems.
For Year 10 Jade, the lesson focused on algebraic manipulation including factorising and expanding expressions, plus tackling indices and applying these to real-world word problems.
Meanwhile, Year 11 Bronte practised compound interest calculations—both with worded applications and repayment scenarios—alongside revision of simple interest using step-by-step breakdowns for each case.
In Year 10, one student explained he felt rushed during a test and "tried finishing as fast as he could," which led to minor errors in geometric justifications.
For a senior maths student, unfinished class worksheets and only a single page of notes across three lessons meant several assigned tasks were left unattempted; this slowed progress with concepts like the five-number summary and Venn diagrams.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student did not show any written working for homework on linear equations—his tutor noted, "he takes a lot of time with worded questions unless every step is recorded."
One Innaloo tutor noticed Lily, a Year 11 student, tackling higher-level algebra and indices questions she previously found daunting—she now attempts these with minimal prompting and greater accuracy.
In Year 10, Ben is developing new habits: after often skipping error-checking, he's begun to talk through his maths solutions aloud and catch mistakes on his own before submitting work.
Meanwhile, in Year 5, Bronte has started verbalising her approach while dividing fractions; this shift means she now identifies her errors independently during practice instead of waiting for corrections.