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I was rather impressed with the ease of obtaining a suitable tutor for my 9 year old son. The tutor profile helped me select who I thought would best suit my child's personality and 3 sessions in my child is still enjoying the tutoring lessons. They got in touch with me almost immediately from when I left my details and there have been many follow up emails to check in on how it's progressing. I would highly recommend EZY Math tutoring to anyone who is considering it.Rowena
Year 6 student Amy explored the introduction to percentages using visual learning aides and discussed tools for practising maths at home.
For Year 10, Daniel reviewed electron shell structure and practiced rearranging formulas in chemistry, working through examples of average atomic mass calculations.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Sarah focused on applying integral calculus to find areas under curves in kinematics graphs and solved related problems involving displacement, velocity, and acceleration using integration and differentiation techniques.
In Year 11 Physics, a student's revision outside of tutoring was described as "unconvincing," with little evidence of proactive follow-up on teacher or tutor suggestions—leading to patchy recall when drawing molecular structures and writing redox reactions.
In Year 9 Mathematics, over-reliance on the calculator meant basic calculation skills weren't practiced; as one tutor observed, "needs to learn calculation without using calculator."
A primary student working on multiplication tables avoided independent practice at home, instead waiting for guidance in sessions—delaying fluency.
In senior Chemistry, late assignment starts left no buffer for feedback or corrections before deadlines passed.
One Park Holme tutor noticed a big shift with a Year 11 student who used to leave assignments until the last minute—he now completes them early and has started creating detailed plans, making it easier to tackle new tasks.
In another session, a high schooler who struggled to communicate their learning gaps began openly sharing challenges and suggesting strategies, showing more ownership of their progress.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student finally grasped the tricky link between fractions and percentages after concepts were shown visually—she was able to solve percentage problems on her own for the first time.
For most students, biology doesn't seem that hard. The content isn't that intimidating and if you put in the time, more often than not results will follow.