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Year 5 student Emily worked on adding and subtracting fractions with different denominators, and practiced converting between fractions and decimals.
In Year 8, Jake focused on simplifying algebraic expressions involving different orders of operations, as well as solving one-step algebraic equations.
Meanwhile, Year 9 student Chloe reviewed factorising quadratics using the difference of two squares and perfect square methods, also extending to non-quadratic expressions for extra challenge.
Missed homework was a clear issue for one Year 9 student, with the tutor noting "missed homework this week"—this led to gaps that showed up in class when recalling earlier methods.
A Year 11 student tended to overuse their calculator during time trials, which meant less working was shown and mistakes went unchecked: "Be careful to not overuse calculator and neglect working out as this led to silly mistakes."
For a Year 7 algebra task, the habit of avoiding writing full steps made it harder to spot sign errors.
In primary years, one student sometimes forgot strategies just covered; this became obvious when asked to explain fraction concepts aloud.
A tutor in Mount Kuring Gai noticed a Year 10 student who used to overlook her own errors now actively self-corrects during maths assessments, even spotting mistakes in teacher solutions—a big shift from earlier sessions.
Another high schooler recently applied trigonometric rules to abstract problems after initially struggling, using diagrams and extraction strategies to break them down independently.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who previously hesitated to ask for clarification is now comfortable voicing when she's unsure and engages fully with new material; last week, she finished all her multiplication practice without any prompting.