100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
Great and patientYasaman, Fairy Meadow
Year 6 student Sarah revised fractions, including adding and subtracting multiple fractions and converting between decimals and percentages.
In Year 9, James practised coordinate geometry by solving challenge questions in preparation for an assessment and worked on trigonometric relations like finding unknown values for sine and cosine.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Chloe focused on composite functions and trig functions, reviewing how to combine function rules and sketch different types of graphs.
In Year 8 Maths, one student found interpreting worded problems challenging and didn't always check their answers—back checking was inconsistent leading to a few mistakes in simpler content.
In Year 10, forgetting to use brackets when sketching algebraic functions resulted in errors that had to be reworked.
For a senior student tackling trigonometry, relying on the calculator process sometimes masked gaps in understanding how to find angles and sides.
Meanwhile, a primary student avoided showing full working for basic multiplication facts, which made it harder to spot where confusion began. This left time spent fixing earlier steps instead of building new skills.
A tutor in Keiraville noticed a big shift for one Year 10 student, Remy, who now routinely asks clarifying questions and double-checks his trigonometry work instead of guessing—something he used to avoid.
Another high school student, Emily, recently tackled complex algebraic expressions and found unknown angles with ease; this was a breakthrough after previously needing step-by-step guidance on similar problems.
Meanwhile, a younger student began using the "speak out loud" method independently when breaking down maths questions—a change from earlier sessions where she hesitated to verbalise her thinking—and finished all ten problems without errors.