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My tutoring is going great, Rory is awesome and I'm very happy with the way things are going. Feeling so much better about my maths already.Belinda, Oaklands Park
Year 11 student James revised normal distribution concepts, calculating probabilities and exploring how variance and cumulative frequency shift as distributions change.
For Year 12, Aiden practised finding the area under curves using integration—especially between two functions—and applied these skills to kinematics problems involving displacement and velocity by interpreting different types of graphs.
Meanwhile, Year 9 student Finn focused on random variables, working through mean and standard deviation calculations across various population sets to deepen understanding of probability in statistics.
Struggled to keep formulas for derivatives and anti-derivatives distinct—mixing them up during integration tasks meant that correct steps were sometimes lost, as one tutor noted, "he mixed up the stuff."
In Year 9 maths, forgetting units of length and area slowed progress in geometry.
For a younger student, lack of confidence with wordy problems made comprehension in problem-solving sessions difficult.
Another senior student relied heavily on cheat sheets and needed more active revision before exams; this resulted in last-minute stress when attempting practice tests under timed conditions.
A Marion tutor recently noticed a big shift in one Year 11 student, who started incorporating diagrams into written physics answers—something they'd previously avoided because it felt confusing.
Another high schooler, after struggling with chemistry redox reactions, began balancing half-equations independently once rules for oxidation states finally clicked.
On the primary side, a Year 4 student who used to guess quietly during maths is now asking for help whenever stuck and even solved several fraction questions on their own last session.
The older student wrapped up by creating a personal formula list for future reference.