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Highly recommend EzyMath. From quick dealings in setting up tutoring to having the most pleasant tutor catch up my daughter to what she had missed in her first term.Tonia, Taylors Lakes
Year 7 student Evangeline focused on identifying and drawing different types of angles, then began working through introductory algebra problems to build foundational skills.
Year 10 student Leah worked on financial mathematics, specifically understanding geometric and linear reducing balance loans and applying these concepts with a financial calculator.
Meanwhile, Year 12 student Michael concentrated on networks and graphs, tackling chapter-based questions involving matrices—covering matrix operations like addition and multiplication as part of his further maths studies.
In Year 10 mathematics, one student repeatedly needed prompting to check answers and struggled with keeping notes neat and organized—missing or messy notes made test preparation stressful and led to last-minute cramming.
"I left one of my old exercise books with him," a tutor observed, hoping clear examples would help.
Meanwhile, a Year 7 learner often forgot materials like exercise books, making it hard to track progress or review concepts. She rarely took initiative in note-taking or asked clarifying questions, leaving her unsure during fractions work.
Forgotten textbooks meant precious lesson time was lost improvising instead of building skills.
One Taylors Lakes tutor noticed Kristian, a high school student, take real initiative in his maths sessions—he began asking to cover specific topics and started using a new exercise book for structured note-taking after struggling with organisation before.
Leah, another high schooler, was recently observed actively problem-solving during lessons rather than waiting for answers; she even tried out new methods independently when tackling unfamiliar material.
In Year 7, Evangeline shifted from rarely taking notes to writing her own summary sheet ahead of a test and could explain what each formula meant as she wrote it down.
It takes a lot to do well in biology. Moving up the curriculum can be a challenge and if students don't jump in with both feet it's easy to fall behind.