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Alicia is doing well at getting my daughter to think and explain her reasoning.Kris
Year 8 student Molly worked through geometry by breaking down the area and circumference of circles and composite shapes, then applied these concepts to challenging algebra questions to strengthen her understanding.
In Year 10, Tahlia focused on surds and their applications alongside simplifying algebraic expressions using real classwork examples.
For Year 11, Sarah revised financial mathematics with an emphasis on compound interest calculations and also tackled syllabus content related to tax and wages, reinforcing her grasp of key senior topics.
In Year 10, one student's confidence wavered during algebra exams; "she hesitated to trust her judgement," leading to last-minute changes and errors on problems she'd mastered in practice.
Another pattern: unclear working—especially missing annotations or skipping steps—meant that when revising geometry or trigonometry (Years 8–11), it was hard for her to trace mistakes or remember logic, often resulting in time wasted re-reading worksheets for answers already found.
In Year 7, messy layouts led to confusion over which numbers belonged where in worded percentage questions, making calculator input unreliable and causing small but critical misreads.
A tutor in Shell Cove recently saw a Year 11 student who, after struggling with finance topics earlier in the term, independently used new problem-solving strategies to tackle a tricky simple interest question—something she would have hesitated to attempt before.
In another session, a Year 9 student who typically rushed through algebra slowed down and started double-checking her work, catching and correcting her own mistakes for the first time.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student brought in questions she found confusing at school and confidently asked for help, showing more initiative than previous weeks when she'd quietly avoid challenging tasks.