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Rhys Keeps my son engaged has a plan for ongoing help and my son is very happy about the learning he is getting.Briony Start, Port Kembla
Year 4 student Layla worked on multiplication and division facts, especially the 3, 6, and 9 times tables, and practiced using number lines for addition and subtraction.
In Year 8, Ava focused on solving algebraic equations involving negative values and algebraic fractions.
For Year 10, Ben tackled linear algebra basics by practicing textbook questions and prepared for an upcoming quiz.
A Year 9 student hesitated to attempt unfamiliar algebra questions, often asking to "study more examples first" instead of trying independently—this meant less practice with trickier skills.
In Year 6, one student's spelling errors in subject vocabulary ("maths words need checking," noted a tutor) affected clarity when writing explanations.
A Year 4 student showed resistance to homework that looked "too easy," resulting in skipped revision and weaker number fact recall under time pressure.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student's layout was inconsistent; cramped numerals and unclear working slowed error-spotting during long multiplication problems.
A Port Kembla tutor recently saw a big shift with a Year 9 student, Nate, who used to rush through reading comprehension but now stops to check both the questions and his answers before moving on—something he avoided in the past.
In Year 7 maths, Layla had struggled with organising her work and often missed patterns in multiplication; now she independently sorts times table cards and finds connections without prompting.
Meanwhile, a younger student, Layne, who was once hesitant during oral reading, suggested reading an extra chapter aloud after finishing her assigned text—her own idea for the first time.