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Year 5 student Jack worked on decimal addition and subtraction, as well as multiplying two- and three-digit numbers, focusing on accurate calculation steps.
In Year 10, Chloe tackled balancing chemical equations and applied stoichiometry to determine relative amounts in reactions using worked examples.
For Year 11 Methods, Ethan revised derivatives of polynomials and trigonometric functions, then used integration techniques to calculate areas under curves for assessment preparation.
A Year 12 student hesitated to physically record ideas during research tasks, making it harder to refer back and connect arguments when drafting essays.
In a senior mathematics session, overthinking integration problems led to stalling on complex logarithmic functions; as one tutor noted, "she kept trying to derive instead of just applying the formula."
Meanwhile, a Year 7 student's written algebra lacked clear step-by-step layout—skipping intermediate steps meant sign errors slipped through unchecked.
On several occasions across Years 8–11, students arrived late or without required materials, cutting into productive lesson time and limiting opportunities for feedback on recent work.
One Stretton tutor noticed a Year 11 student who used to hesitate when stuck on critical path network questions now confidently asks for help and talks through her process, showing much more independence.
In a senior chemistry session, Lohit—who often needed reminders—started outlining key information on his own before tackling chemical equations, even recalling atomic properties without prompting.
Meanwhile, a younger student who previously relied on repeated explanations for times tables is now identifying "anchor" facts herself and using them to solve harder multiplication problems independently, finishing her practice set without needing extra hints.