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Year 7 student Bella worked through areas, surface areas, and volumes of composite shapes using diagrams to visualise each step.
Year 10 student Tom focused on revising bivariate statistics for his upcoming maths exam and practiced interpreting scatter plots.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Grace tackled linear programming by identifying feasible regions on graphs and solving related problem sets.
A Year 9 student often left out crucial details when plotting data points, leading to confusion about the accuracy of their results; as one tutor put it, "Just be careful with dot and stem/leaf plots to make sure no data point is accidently ignored."
In Year 11 calculus, reluctance to write out full working meant missed steps in applying derivative rules, especially under time pressure.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 learner struggled to keep written solutions organized and clear, making final answers harder to check for rounding or sign errors. This made reviewing mistakes more difficult after feedback sessions.
One Russell tutor noticed a big shift with a Year 11 student who, after weeks of struggling to rearrange equations, now reliably spots her own mistakes and corrects them without prompting.
In Year 10 maths, another student started speaking up whenever an explanation wasn't clear—whereas before, she'd just stay quiet and guess. This new independence in asking for help marks real progress.
A younger student in Year 5 surprised his tutor by using general maths knowledge to solve an unfamiliar problem on his own, something he'd previously hesitated to attempt. Tackling unfamiliar problems independently is a major step forward.
Last session finished with the Year 11 student confidently handling transition matrix questions solo.