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Year 8 student Jay tackled simultaneous equations and practiced pattern recognition by working through John Monash practice questions.
For Year 9, Lisa focused on simple interest calculations and solving more advanced simultaneous equations, using both textbook problems and applied examples.
Meanwhile, Year 4 student Noah worked on multiplication conceptsâspecifically two-digit by one-digit multiplicationâand explored division as forming equal groups with visual aids.
In Year 11 mathematics, not bringing the correct equipment and materialsâdespite remindersâmeant lesson time was lost reorganizing instead of problem-solving. As a tutor observed, "he needs to be more diligent in keeping notes and having his materials ready for tutoring."
For a Year 9 student, an over-reliance on technology led to skipping written working in algebra; missing steps caused confusion when checking answers.
In primary (Year 3), incomplete homework limited consolidation of times tables and multiplication skills, leaving basic errors uncorrected.
After setbacks in essay writing (Year 10 English), frustration quickly set in, making it harder to recover confidence mid-task.
One Noble Park tutor noticed that a Year 9 student, Seth, who previously hesitated to ask questions when confused, has started actively seeking clarification during sessions and now explains his logic before hearing the answerâshowing real independence.
In Year 10 English, Mitchell shifted from being unsure about how to start argument analyses to confidently drafting introductions on his own and identifying authors' main arguments without prompting.
Meanwhile, in Year 3 maths, Florianâwho used to be quiet and unfocusedânow talks through problem-solving steps out loud and checks his work independently after adopting new strategies with the whiteboard.