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Year 6 student Ariana reviewed angle relationships and probability by working through her recent school exam paper, and was also randomly tested on square roots to strengthen recall.
In Year 8, Zac focused on solving one-step algebraic equations from worded problems and practiced long division with remainders, revisiting questions he found challenging in homework.
Meanwhile, Year 9 student Daniel explored polynomials and graphing functions, using worked examples to clarify how changes in equations affect their graphs.
In Year 7 maths, Ariana's homework was often incomplete or left unanswered, especially when it covered multiple topics.
During lessons, she relied on memory instead of writing out full working—her long division solutions were correct but "her working out is confusing and may not be accepted by her classroom teacher."
In algebra and probability revision for exams, lost notes and disorganized materials made it difficult to revisit key concepts.
When faced with setbacks or mistakes in equations, she grew discouraged and found it hard to regain confidence, sometimes responding with "I can't" before attempting a problem again.
One Sadleir tutor noticed a big change in a Year 8 student who used to rely on prompts for long division but now solves questions independently, even choosing her own method instead of the usual steps.
In another session, a Year 11 student showed new initiative by reviewing his physics mistakes from a recent exam and could clearly explain what went wrong—something he hesitated to do before.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student who often guessed at answers has started saying each maths step out loud as he works, helping him catch errors himself and finish his worksheet without any corrections needed.