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Awesome Tutor and been with my son for almost 5 years now, Patient and understanding and always has time to help and never gets frustrated from him when he doesn't understand somethingJenny Elekiabi
Year 5 student Chloe worked on breaking numbers into tens and ones as well as practising addition and subtraction using real-life examples.
In Year 10, Jamie focused on revising financial mathematics, particularly interest calculations, and also reviewed the basics of simultaneous equations and inequalities from class.
Meanwhile, Year 12 student Alex tackled HSC Business Studies topics including marketing influences—such as psychological and sociocultural factors affecting customer choice—and completed revision of marketing processes with exam-style practice questions.
In Year 11 Business Studies, one student often left note revision and exam practice until the last minute, leading to "bottlenecking" before trials—this meant re-learning content instead of refining responses.
A tutor observed that skipping regular review sessions caused connections between syllabus concepts to be missed, limiting depth in written reports.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 Maths student frequently avoided writing out full working for algebra problems; as noted, "he tried to do it all in his head," resulting in hidden errors and less confidence tackling new equations.
In both cases, organization and consistent process directly shaped outcomes.
One Pitt Town Bottoms tutor recently saw a Year 11 student who, after weeks of hesitation, started actively pinpointing his weaker topics and steering the session toward those gaps—a big shift from earlier lessons where he waited for direction.
Another high schooler, previously prone to rushing through practice exams and missing details, took extra time during a session to double-check multiple choice answers under timed conditions and improved accuracy as a result.
In a primary lesson, Sannae used chunking strategies to sound out longer words independently, instead of waiting for help with tricky reading passages.
It takes a lot to do well in biology. Moving up the curriculum can be a challenge and if students don't jump in with both feet it's easy to fall behind.