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I would like to send a sincere thank you to your team for choosing Stefanie Palin into our home. My son, at first, was not keen to have a tutor. However, upon meeting Stefanie from the very first meeting he became keen to learn! Jared`s current maths school teacher has not been able to explain elements of trigonometry. However, after Stefanie showed him techniques he understood within minutes (I overheard Jared saying this). I have found Stefanie to be punctual, professional and very eager to help Jared learn and a lovely lady. If I hear of anyone needing a tutor I will not hesitate to inform them of your company.Angela, Sinnamon Park
Year 10 student Lily worked through quadratic graphs and their properties, focusing on different forms of the equation and solving quadratics using factorisation and the quadratic formula.
For Year 11, Ethan addressed assignment queries involving polynomials versus non-polynomials and practiced applying derivatives to exponential and logarithmic functions within a PSMT context.
Meanwhile, Year 7 student Grace consolidated her understanding of algebraic expressions by substituting values for variables to solve problems, as well as distinguishing between linear and non-linear equations.
A Year 12 student in Maths often left homework incomplete, particularly when practice involved plotting graphs or using the graphics calculator; as one tutor noted, "homework was not completed," leaving key graphing skills underdeveloped before assessment.
In Chemistry (Year 11), missed note-taking and infrequent review meant definitions and formula applications were forgotten during revision.
For a Year 8 maths learner, sessions revealed difficulty organizing materials—relevant sheets and laptops were not ready at hand—so time was lost searching for resources instead of practicing questions. In these moments, the struggle to stay organised or follow up on feedback quietly stalled progress between lessons.
A tutor in Sinnamon Park noticed a real shift with a Year 11 student who used to hesitate when confused—he now speaks up straight away if he needs something re-explained, instead of staying quiet and guessing.
In another high school session, one student who previously struggled with balancing equations managed to work through complex stoichiometry independently for the first time.
Meanwhile, a Year 5 student who often skipped key steps in maths has started carefully checking her working after each question, catching mistakes herself before moving on.