100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
This is our first experience with tutoring & the staff at Ezymath Tutoring have definitely made it easy! From my initial enquiry, they have been very responsive & helpful (but not pushy like some of the other tutoring companies I contacted). Within a couple of days, they arranged a tutor for my son who got in touch to organise a trial lesson. I understand that if we felt the tutor wasn't a good match, we wouldn't be charged for the trial lesson & they would find an alternative tutor. Luckily we didn't have that issue as everything seemed to go well from the start & my son told me his tutor was really good at explaining things. It's very early days so I can't comment on results, but already my son seems to be feeling more motivated and positive - he has actually done the homework & is looking forward to his next session :) Ezymath followed up after the trial & seem very concerned to make sure we are happy which we are so far! They have also sent through quite a lot of useful info including study tips and practice papers. Ultimately, it's the individual tutor who will have the most influence on your child's progress, but I definitely feel that Ezymath provides an excellent support structure to enable this.Lisa S, Melrose Park
Year 4 student John worked on adding and simplifying fractions with different denominators, using visual models to support understanding.
For Year 9, Hannah focused on solving algebraic equations—including some involving squared terms—and practised advanced percentage questions like combining multiple increases.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Olivia tackled trig graphing and trig equation problems from her homework, then reviewed challenging exam questions involving logarithmic laws.
In Year 8 mathematics, messy working and lack of written steps—especially in fraction questions—caused confusion when reviewing methods later; as one tutor noted, "he wrote equations in random spots on the page."
A Year 10 student listened during lessons but rarely took notes, leading to forgotten steps in algebra tasks.
For a senior student tackling calculus, skipping note-taking meant key integration techniques were easily overlooked during revision.
In physics (Year 11), scattered layout made it hard to track relationships between voltage and resistance calculations, so extra time was spent reworking missed connections instead of moving forward.
One Melrose Park tutoring session saw a Year 11 student, who'd been hesitant with the reverse chain rule in calculus, manage to solve harder questions on her own after some practice—she'd previously needed step-by-step guidance.
A Year 9 student showed a shift in approach: instead of waiting for prompts, he independently attempted more challenging probability questions and started finding complementary events himself, which he hadn't done before.
Meanwhile, a younger student who had struggled with rearranging equations was able to confidently solve two-step problems by the end of his lesson without second-guessing each move.