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Going amazingly! Tayla had an online lesson on Monday, but still went really well! Isabella is going above and beyond. We're so grateful that you have introduced us to her!Jacqui
Year 8 student Alyssa focused on interpreting worded questions involving perimeters and reviewed fractions in her Maths Pathways modules, while also practising decimal number lines.
Elysia, currently studying for TAFE entry, strengthened her understanding of long division by linking it to the processes used in her course and then applied this to converting fractions to decimals.
Year 5 student Jai worked hands-on with skip counting by 3s using outdoor pavers and explored fractions through sharing real-life scenarios like pizza slices and room sharing.
In Year 11 TAFE Maths, Elysia's progress was disrupted by irregular lesson attendance—gaps of several weeks meant she forgot key processes (like converting fractions to decimals), so each session required significant revision before new topics could be attempted.
"With a month's gap, she needed a full hour just to rebuild confidence with fractions," one tutor noted.
Meanwhile, in Year 7 Maths, Alyssa often rushed through questions and sometimes skipped writing her working out for worded problems; this led to small but repeated errors that clearer written steps might have prevented.
For Year 5, Treasure hesitated to attempt answers when unsure and occasionally guessed without reasoning through problems on Prodigy, making it hard for her to build lasting confidence or track improvement during practice activities.
A tutor in Rosedale noticed Alyssa, a high school student, has become much more accurate with complex fraction problems by writing each step and rechecking her work—something she previously rushed through in her head.
Elysia, also in high school, now talks herself through multi-step Maths processes aloud and creates "cheat sheets" to guide her when working independently; this marks a big shift from earlier lessons where she hesitated to start unfamiliar problems alone.
Meanwhile, Tegan (Year 5) showed new initiative by asking for homework between sessions and doubled the amount of practice paragraphs she was set for punctuation review.