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After expressing my interest in getting a maths tutor I received a very friendly phone call from a lady called Gemma. She asked me for my preferences regarding a tutor and linked me with someone in my area. My maths tutor (Dushyant) then rang me and arranged a first lesson. He was professional, friendly and had already done some preparation into the exam that I was studying for. I really appreciated the fact that he already knew what the perimeters and skill level of the exam, so that he could then work towards this level during our lessons. He always came well prepared and was interested in helping me, even during the week when I got stuck with a question. I feel more confident about sitting the exam now and have definitely learnt a lot in only one month.Ronja Schneller
Year 6 student Layla focused on calculating simple interest and solving profit and loss problems using real-world scenarios.
For Year 8, Eve tackled trigonometry basics including Pythagoras' theorem and worked through finding unknown angles in triangles, often using exam-style questions for practice.
Meanwhile, Year 9 student Sophia concentrated on simplifying index laws and evaluating expressions involving order of operations, revising both homework and recent school test material to address areas of difficulty.
A Year 8 student did not bring required materials to several sessions and, as a result, had to redo work instead of progressing—"lost previous homework sheet so had to spend lesson going through it again."
In Year 10 Maths, missing homework has become a pattern; one session was spent clarifying past content because set tasks weren't completed beforehand.
For a Year 6 learner, messy written layout in multi-step arithmetic made it difficult to track errors and slowed learning.
Meanwhile, in senior years, inconsistent note-taking left gaps when revising unfamiliar formulae, especially in trigonometry assignments. Confidence sometimes dropped after setbacks.
A Mount Sheridan tutor noticed a big shift with a Year 10 student who started bringing her own practice work to sessions, keen to prep for an upcoming test—a real turnaround from earlier lessons where she waited for direction.
Another high schooler who previously hesitated to ask questions came prepared with specific problems on fractions, then worked through tougher examples without prompting.
In Year 6, one student who used to get stuck on division surprised us by tackling new problems independently and finishing all assigned homework before the session ended.