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My daughter got her first D in maths in year 3 and managed with a lot of fighting with me to get to a C at the end of that year. We decided to get her a tutor in year 4 because I could not face the battles and the EMU program was not building her confidence. Stella from Ezymaths was able to quickly build rapport with my daughter, was patient and helped build her confidence. Instead of coming home from school saying she is the dumbest at maths in the year she is happy and confident and achieved a B in her last report!Rebecca Cushway
Year 3 student Claudia worked on basic addition using the expansion method and practiced subtracting tens from numbers like 165-60, building confidence with larger place value calculations.
Year 7 student Leonardo completed a diagnostic maths assessment covering place value, addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division before moving on to multiplying two-digit numbers such as 345 × 23.
Meanwhile, Year 8 student Nina revised adding and multiplying fractions together and learned to find the lowest common multiple for two numbers in preparation for more advanced problem solving.
A Year 8 student's workbook showed messy handwriting and rushed layout during fraction calculations, making it hard to follow her own steps—errors in adding fractions often went unnoticed until review.
In Year 10 creative writing, a student with strong verbal ideas struggled to organize thoughts on paper; as noted, "he has great difficulty gathering ideas in written form," so practice outside lessons is needed to build fluency and confidence.
Several primary students did not complete assigned homework before sessions, leading to repeated coverage of the same times tables rather than progressing. This left them feeling frustrated when new material was delayed.
A tutor in Pinny Beach noticed that a Year 9 student, Aanika, who used to hesitate with multi-step algebraic equations, now tackles new problems confidently and independently applies the correct formulas without prompting.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student, Jasmine, who previously avoided harder fraction questions, has begun attempting them right away and solved several mixed-number addition problems on her own last week.
At the primary level, Jordan has moved from counting on his fingers for basic sums to consistently using mental strategies for both addition and subtraction, even when given larger numbers during sessions.