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Nice and helpful tutorsThi Huynh, Seabrook
Year 7 student Emily worked through probability questions and tackled algebra and indices practice, focusing on using step-by-step examples to clarify each process.
In Year 10, Sam focused on quadratic equations—solving and graphing them—and explored higher degree polynomials with a mix of written solutions and calculator checks.
Meanwhile, Year 12 student Ava concentrated on differentiation in calculus and completed SAC revision sessions targeting trigonometry problems from recent class assessments.
A Year 12 student relied heavily on their CAS calculator for differentiation tasks—"needs to recall formulas without prompts," noted the tutor—which led to hesitation when calculators weren't allowed.
In Year 9, skipping careful reading of probability questions resulted in misinterpreted instructions and incomplete answers.
For a Year 7 student, messy fraction working made it difficult to spot where errors had crept in; lines were crowded, so mistakes went unnoticed until reviewing.
One senior student glossed over multi-step algebra problems, confident in their understanding, but this habit meant missing key simplification steps and redoing work under time pressure during tests.
One Seabrook tutor noticed a big change in a Year 11 student who previously mixed up the product and chain rules in calculus; now, she not only distinguishes between them but can apply both when solving derivative problems.
A Year 9 student, after weeks of hesitating on algebra basics, started tackling basic algebra questions without prompting—she even attempted a few challenging worded equations for the first time.
Meanwhile, another high schooler who struggled with binomial probability questions last term managed to answer almost every question on his recent practice SAC independently.