100% Good Fit Guarantee
Love your tutor or it's free. Guaranteed.
Easy to set up and we have a great tutorClayton
Year 5 student Alyssia worked on adding and subtracting mixed number fractions with different denominators, alongside creative writing that focused on using commas and exclamation marks.
In Year 10, Ethan tackled equations of straight lines—identifying gradients and y-intercepts—and practised graphing them accurately.
Meanwhile, Year 11 student Grace reviewed titrations in Chemistry, focusing on calculating molar ratios and manipulating the n = CV formula for various titration scenarios.
In Year 4, a student's handwriting made their work hard to follow—random capital letters in the middle of sentences disrupted clarity and slowed review. "Sentences need to be conscientious and not rambling," one tutor noted, as unclear written expression muddled key ideas.
In Year 10 maths, another relied heavily on worked examples rather than attempting new problems independently; this habit meant that when faced with unfamiliar algebraic questions, they hesitated instead of applying concepts creatively.
A senior chemistry student often checked formulas instead of trusting recall during molar ratio tasks, which interrupted flow and reduced confidence under timed conditions.
One Stonyfell tutor noticed a big change in a Year 11 student who, after initially struggling with titration equations, was able to solve complex problems independently by the end of the session.
In Year 10 maths, another student who previously hesitated to ask for clarification now comes prepared with specific questions and actively steers sessions toward their trickiest topics.
Meanwhile, a younger primary student has started applying fraction techniques on their own with fewer reminders than before and can explain how commas separate ideas in writing—something they often missed earlier.