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So far, we are very happy with Ashleigh.Katherine
Year 6 student Daniel worked on adding and subtracting mixed number fractions with different denominators and practised creative writing by focusing on commas and exclamation points.
In Year 10, Alyssia revised titration calculations in chemistry, including using the n = m/M and C × V equations, and balanced chemical equations for her upcoming exam.
For Year 11, Zoe tackled sketching graphs using both x- and y-intercepts as well as the gradient-intercept method to strengthen her understanding of linear functions.
A Year 9 student often rushed through algebra problems, showing working that was hard to follow and skipped steps, which made it difficult to catch sign errors and led to repeated mistakes.
In a Year 5 English session, messy handwriting—with capital letters scattered mid-sentence—made some responses confusing even when ideas were clear.
One Year 11 student relied heavily on formula sheets for chemistry calculations instead of recalling processes independently; as noted, "she preferred checking old answers before trying new ones."
After missing key reasoning in geometry tests, a Year 8 learner left several explanations incomplete, which meant losing marks despite knowing the content.
One Piccadilly tutor recently noticed a big shift with a Year 11 student who had struggled with titration calculations—by the end of their session, she could complete complex questions independently, having previously needed step-by-step guidance.
A Year 8 student showed new initiative in maths: after once relying heavily on prompts, he now pinpoints his own uncertainties and actively asks targeted questions until he understands, guiding the lesson himself.
In Year 5, a student who used to need reminders for each fraction problem managed several problems in a row independently before asking for help only when truly stuck.
Learning science is full of twists and turns. It's about making embarrassing mistakes, overcoming setbacks and chasing those exhilarating aha moments.
If they want to achieve great results students need to put in the time, but they also need to learn at a quicker pace - a learning pace that might not be completely comfortable to them. Some students get to the finish line quicker and some students struggle along the way.
This is exactly when they can benefit from guided learning the most.
We work with great physics tutors in Piccadilly who can support your child's academic progress. There's always a test or quiz around the corner and with a great tutor guiding them, students tend to feel less overwhelmed.
Tutors are also great role models. It's all about the connection they make with the student. We've found that when a tutor and a child click - that's when learning happens.
That is exactly what we look for in a tutor, someone attuned to the specific needs of your child.
All we need is to have a quick chat with you. We organise a tutor to come to your home for one-on-one tutoring, at a time that works for you and your child.
You pay a simple hourly rate. And if it happens that you are not completely happy with the tutor, we consider the first lesson a risk-free trial. Then we keep looking for a better match.
Sounds good so far? We can start looking for a local physics tutor in Piccadilly right away!
Just give us a call!
1300 312 354