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I am so impressed with our tutor John. He has engaged my son from their first session and has made math a positive experience.Jessica
Year 7 student Lucas worked on applying the sine and cosine rules in trigonometry as well as solving worded probability questions.
For Year 10, Priya reviewed techniques for rearranging algebraic equations and practiced factorisation of polynomials, using graphing to reinforce connections between equations and their visual representations.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Noah focused on understanding compound interest calculations and explored real-world applications involving appreciation and mortgages.
In Year 8 maths, a student often skipped showing working in algebra tasks, leading to errors that "should've been an A considering his understanding of the topic."
For a Year 10 assignment, incomplete explanations meant reasoning was unclear and lost marks in multi-step geometry proofs.
In Year 4, forgetting to write units on measurement questions resulted in confusion over final answers.
A Year 11 English student's paragraph structure remained underdeveloped; as noted, "needs to focus on the reflective aspect of the recount," which left their ideas disconnected and feedback unaddressed after drafts.
One Scott Creek tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to rush through exams and lose marks on "silly mistakes" now slowing down to double-check answers before moving on, especially with algebra questions.
In another session, a high schooler who previously hesitated to ask for clarification during lessons began pausing mid-problem to request help with tricky graph interpretation—a big shift from quietly guessing.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student showed real independence by switching between decimals and fractions without prompts, after struggling with conversions last term.
Last week, that same student finished all ten practice problems without any calculation errors.