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The first lesson with Loren went really well. Sophie got on with her well and Loren was able to help Sophie with a few things she found tricky.Zoe
Year 4 student Ben worked on long multiplication and practised finding the perimeter and area of rectangles, using real-world examples for context.
In Year 10, Aidan focused on comparative essay writing by analysing exemplar responses and drafting a strong introduction, while also revisiting his own previous work.
For VCE Psychology, Year 12 student Jodie reviewed principles of sensation and perception—including Gestalt principles—and summarised binocular and monocular depth cues with visual aids to deepen understanding.
A Year 12 Psychology student often hesitated to use subject-specific terminology in short-answer responses; as one tutor noted, "she needs more psychological language to maximise marks." This meant even strong ideas lost impact in assessments.
In Year 9 English, a focus on wordiness and run-on sentences led to overly long answers that missed key points—"he sometimes repeats the same word in the same sentence," a tutor observed during essay work.
Meanwhile, a Year 3 learner struggled with spelling and left several longer words unfinished when writing stories, making it hard for them to communicate ideas clearly and independently.
A tutor in Kealba recently noticed a Year 11 student who'd struggled to make her arguments clear is now writing concise topic sentences and developing insightful points on her own.
Another high schooler, previously hesitant with comparative essays, has started using evidence more confidently to support his ideas when analysing two texts side by side.
In a younger session, one Year 4 student—who used to avoid reading aloud—read an entire page without prompting and even paused to sound out tricky words independently. The lesson finished with him asking for a harder paragraph next time.