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Priyanka was amazing, and Jasmine enjoyed the sessionLina, Caroline Springs
Year 7 student Ashan focused on identifying and solving problems with complementary, supplementary, corresponding, alternate, co-interior, and vertically opposite angles using diagrams, as well as revisiting algebra basics and working through long division from the Year 8 textbook.
Another Year 7 student spent time planning and improving a TEEL essay paragraph for an argument analysis prompt about school uniforms and practiced public speaking skills during a mock debate.
For Year 6, Amish worked on converting decimals to fractions and multiplying decimals, alongside exploring persuasive writing techniques like emotive language and hyperbole in short essays.
A Year 10 student repeatedly avoided showing working in algebra, relying on mental calculations—"I can do this in my head," he said—which led to confusion and errors, especially when solving equations under test pressure.
In English, the same student struggled to organize ideas clearly in essays; mind maps were suggested to help structure arguments but follow-through was inconsistent.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 learner hesitated to attempt word problems independently until step-by-step guidance was provided.
In both cases, not engaging fully with feedback or written process slowed progress and left gaps when revisiting past material during revision sessions.
One Kings Park tutor noticed a real shift with Ashan, a Year 7 student who used to mix up angle types and lose marks on tests—after targeted practice, he now explains his reasoning out loud and confidently corrects his own mistakes during lessons.
Another high schooler recently tackled long division and negative numbers independently for the first time, only needing help with larger divisors—a big change from previous hesitation with complex calculations.
Meanwhile, a younger student who started off slow with factors is now finishing factor-finding activities without reminders and even volunteers answers before being prompted.
It takes a lot to do well in biology. Moving up the curriculum can be a challenge and if students don't jump in with both feet it's easy to fall behind.