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Good Morning, Thomas started tutoring Jaxon at the beginning of this year as he was struggling in the essential subjects last year. We attended his Teacher/parent in March and his teacher was concerned about his progress.What a difference Thomas has made.His school report this week was a major climb in both marks a comments. Jaxon adores Thomas and thrives on his postive teaching skills to him.Please pass on a huge Shoutout to him.Jaxon Lassey
Year 6 student Chido focused on converting millilitres to litres and grams to kilograms, as well as solving area and perimeter questions for squares.
Year 11 student Olivia worked through 24-hour time problems using a worksheet, then practised adding and subtracting hours and minutes from set times.
For Year 12, revision with Jasmine included applying trigonometric equations—such as interpreting amplitude and frequency changes—and reviewing logarithms, covering rules for converting between exponentials and logarithmic forms.
A Year 3 student hesitated to use written working for subtraction, preferring mental calculation even when struggling with regrouping. As noted, "he was just guessing numbers after a few times," rather than using materials provided—this made it hard to spot where place value errors crept in.
In Year 11 Maths Methods, one student repeatedly mixed up exponential and log rules, but didn't seek clarification from the teacher about missing procedures, leaving gaps unaddressed.
For Year 12 Chemistry, another found it difficult to keep track of referencing requirements in reports, resulting in incomplete bibliographies and some lost marks.
A tutor in Redbank Plains noticed a big shift with one Year 11 student who now confidently tackles tough calculus review questions, extracting information from complex problems after previously hesitating to even attempt them.
Meanwhile, a Year 8 student showed real growth by asking for help on pattern worksheets instead of staying silent—last term she'd often give up when stuck, but now works through challenges more openly.
In primary years, Joseph moved from needing step-by-step support to solving three- and four-digit addition using the house method entirely on his own, finishing all number pattern tasks without any errors.