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Year 5 student tackled area calculations for rectangles and triangles, applying formulas to practical problems.
For Year 10, Ava worked on proving congruent triangles and explored how scale factors affect similar shapes.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Daniel focused on trigonometry concepts—solving right-angled triangles—and applied index laws to algebraic expressions.
In Year 10 Maths, one student's tendency to keep lesson materials scattered across multiple digital folders—slides here, problems there—left her feeling lost about what to revise. As a tutor noted, "she doesn't have a clear overview of what she needs to learn," making it tough to connect concepts before tests.
In Year 8 Geometry, another avoided drawing diagrams in a physical notebook, relying on laptops instead; this slowed progress with shapes and visual proofs.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student repeatedly left homework incomplete and forgot his textbook for lessons, so he missed out on practicing key number skills when they were fresh in mind.
One Naval Base tutor noted a real shift with a Year 10 student who, after previously leaving most homework unfinished, has started completing assignments early and even asked for extra practice on probability.
A Year 8 learner, once hesitant to lay out her maths workings, now sets out each calculation step clearly and rarely needs correction—a big change from her earlier guesswork.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student who used to rush through reading aloud is now pausing to use the dictionary independently when stuck on new words, finishing today's chapter with only one prompt needed.
It takes a lot to do well in biology. Moving up the curriculum can be a challenge and if students don't jump in with both feet it's easy to fall behind.