100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
From the moment Jess walked in the door she was engaging and warm. My daughter took to Jess straight away and the teaching methods were at my daughter's pace and gave her confidence in maths again. I'm glad I made the decision to use a tutor at this crucial at the start of high school. I'm already impressed by Jess' professionalism and successful teaching methods.Simone Wright, Figtree
Year 8 student Mia focused on coordinate geometry for an upcoming assessment, working through challenge questions and applying trigonometric relations like solving for sin(x) and cos(x).
Year 10 student Alex revised logarithms by evaluating expressions using log laws and properties, then tackled trigonometry with complementary angles.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sam addressed network and critical path analysis in preparation for assessments, breaking down project scheduling problems into clear steps.
In Year 11, a student relied heavily on calculators during algebraic simplification—"maybe a little less reliance on the calculator for some of them"—which masked gaps in formula recall and slowed independent problem-solving.
A Year 8 learner struggled to organise working out neatly when tackling worded questions; copying negative signs incorrectly led to small but recurring errors.
In Year 5 maths, another student's difficulty reading analog clocks and handling time differences showed up when trying to track daily events.
For one senior student, inconsistent back-checking on worded problems resulted in missed marks even on familiar content, leaving her frustrated after reviewing corrections together.
One Keiraville tutor recently noticed a big shift in a Year 10 student's approach to trigonometry: after initially relying heavily on prompts, he began clarifying confusions himself and consistently identified solution steps for trig questions without needing guidance.
In Year 8, another student who'd previously struggled with adding fractions was able to solve problems involving multiple fractions—something that had been a sticking point before—and moved on to confidently tackling BIDMAS questions after some revision.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student who once hesitated to break down maths problems started speaking her thought process out loud and now uses new problem-solving strategies on her own.