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Michael is wonderful with Anton.Erin, Oxley Park
Year 8 student Riya focused on simplifying algebraic expressions by identifying coefficients, variables, and constants, and practised adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing algebraic terms using sign rules.
For Year 10, Lucas tackled income and taxation calculations—working through wages, overtime, bonuses, allowances—and applied these concepts to solve real-world pay scenarios.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sophie explored probability with tree diagrams and conditional probability problems from extension exercises, developing confidence in analysing reduced sample spaces.
In Year 11 Mathematics, one student often entered equations incorrectly into the calculator and hesitated to explain her working aloud—likely from shyness in a new setting. This led to unnoticed input errors.
For another Year 10 student, "she second guessed a lot of her work," which caused unnecessary mistakes and slowed progress, especially when recalling formulas without prompts.
In Year 7 problem solving, incomplete written steps made it difficult to retrace solutions if an answer was off; as noted, "she doesn't write down all the steps of her working out." The result: confusion during review and missed learning opportunities.
A tutor in Oxley Park recently noticed a Year 9 student who had previously relied on hints now choosing her own strategies to solve probability questions, even explaining when data might be biased.
A Year 11 student, after struggling with exponentials, was able to confidently work through algebraic equations and pinpoint where errors happened without prompting.
In a Year 5 session, one child who used to skip writing working out has begun showing all steps for each maths problem before sharing answers aloud.
Last week, that same student finished every time conversion task independently using written methods.