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Evangeline is lovely. She is very patient with Steph and takes the time to explain things quite clearly to her. After Evangeline has been, Steph is very happy and excited that she has learned something new.Kelly
Year 11 student Aimee worked on stoichiometry, focusing on mole-mass and mass-mole conversions, and later revised organic chemistry topics for an upcoming SAC using practice exam questions.
Year 12 student Charli tackled the adaptive immune system and CRISPR-Cas9 gene technology, answering a mix of multiple choice and short answer questions to apply her knowledge.
Meanwhile, Alissa in Year 12 reviewed Food Chemistry concepts by working through detailed exam-style questions related to her upcoming SAC and revisited equilibrium principles from recent classwork.
In Year 11 Chemistry, Aimee sometimes became overwhelmed by complex questions, leading her to overcomplicate answers and miss key steps; as a tutor noted, "breaking the question into meaningful parts" helped her regain clarity.
Meanwhile, Alissa struggled to apply rules accurately in exam settings—she often neglected to reference available resources like the oxidation table, resulting in missed marks during calculations.
For Scarlett (Year 6 English), hesitation to begin writing personal pieces led to delays; she would stall rather than launch ideas onto the page. This reluctance meant drafts were started late and finished under time pressure.
One Rosny tutor noticed a big shift in Aimee's approach to chemistry: she now speaks up when confused, asking targeted questions and working patiently through tricky problems—previously, she tended to stay quiet when stuck.
Charli has started highlighting her own areas of uncertainty during sessions and uses diagrams independently, which marks a real step toward independent learning compared to earlier sessions where she'd wait for direction.
In a recent session, Zane read an article aloud with fluency and expression, then paraphrased main points accurately—something he found challenging last term.
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.