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Dushyant has been a great tutor for myself and I am already starting to see some real improvements in both my understanding of maths as well as my attitude towards the subject itself. Dushyant has been very reassuring and supportive, giving me a boost in confidence that I will be able to pass the test ahead.Ronja
Year 12 student Libby worked through differentiation, tangents to equations, and sketching cubic functions, applying these skills to her PSMT assignment.
For Year 11, Olivia focused on discrete random variables—calculating variance, standard deviation, and expected value—using real data examples.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Mia practised converting between fractions, decimals and percentages as well as simplifying algebraic expressions and solving basic algebraic equations for homework review.
A Year 11 student, when working through calculus problems, often made small errors with negatives during differentiation and struggled to recall the exact value triangles for trigonometry—"he should definitely try to avoid those little mistakes as much as possible."
In Year 8, one student repeatedly mixed up area and circumference formulas for circles; not having these memorised slowed down problem-solving.
A Year 4 student forgot their homework booklet and did not complete assigned tasks several weeks in a row, leading to extra time spent catching up instead of moving forward.
For another younger learner, messy and oversized handwriting in English meant answers were sometimes hard to read or mark accurately.
A Kippa Ring tutor noticed one high school student who used to get stuck on indices now tackling them confidently after a bit of practice, even asking for extra algebra review by request.
Another older student who initially hesitated with the product and quotient rules in calculus was able to recall these from previous sessions and apply them independently, moving on to trigonometric equations without prompting.
Meanwhile, a Year 3 student who started out shy and quiet has begun speaking up more during lessons and will now try tricky maths problems aloud—even when unsure—rather than staying silent or waiting for help.