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Year 10 student Daniel worked on **trigonometry concepts including SOHCAHTOA and special angles**, as well as revising the ASTC quadrants and practicing quadratic equations through factorisation and the quadratic formula.
In Year 11, Sarah focused on **binomial expansions using Pascal's triangle patterns and factorials**, reviewed solving simultaneous equations by substitution and elimination, and briefly explored imaginary numbers to clarify square roots of negatives.
Year 12 student Jessica tackled **differentiation rules such as chain rule versus product rule**, with in-depth practice identifying when to use each method, and also applied trigonometric identities to solve proof questions.
A Year 11 student's tendency to skip writing steps in trigonometric proofs led her to lose track of signs and ASTC quadrant rules, which meant she sometimes wrote "None" for questions requiring detailed justification.
In Year 8 algebra, another student was seen blurting out answers without using pen and paper, resulting in confusion about how she arrived at solutions—especially with like terms and fractions.
A Year 5 student repeatedly left homework incomplete; checking her notebook revealed missed algebraic practice, causing further gaps in understanding BIDMAS and ratios.
Negative self-talk ("I'm stupid") frequently followed mistakes across all levels, undermining confidence during quizzes.
One Rouse Hill tutor noticed a Year 10 student who used to avoid double-checking her work now regularly backchecks her solutions, catching small errors herself during quizzes.
Another high schooler, after struggling with trigonometric proofs and often waiting for hints, has begun tackling these questions independently and will now attempt each step before asking for help.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student who previously panicked at long multiplication is starting to verbalise her thinking process and willingly attempts answers aloud, even when unsure. In one session, she completed every multiplication problem using the written method without needing reassurance.