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EzyMath Tutoring have been very helpful and listened to what we needed for our child. They are very good with their follow up, touching base with us along the way to see if we are happy with the Tutor and services. My daughter is very happy with her Tutor, a perfect fit for her.Lia Miller, Tuart Hill
Year 10 student Olivia worked through trigonometry, focusing on using sine, cosine, and tangent to find missing sides and angles in right-angled triangles, as well as reviewing the relationship between angle of inclination and gradient.
Year 11 student Jack practised normal distribution questions, including calculating probabilities and quantiles from worded problems and revising statistical terms like mean, median, and mode.
Meanwhile, Year 12 student Ella tackled redox reactions by writing half-equations for oxidation/reduction processes and applying oxidation numbers to identify species being oxidised or reduced.
A Year 7 student arrived without a maths book, making it hard to follow the syllabus-based lesson—"it took extra time to get organised," noted the tutor.
In Year 10, one student did not complete volume homework and admitted uncertainty about textbook chapters, which delayed feedback on their understanding.
For a Year 12 Chemistry learner, exam preparation was disrupted by incomplete revision questions; they struggled to plan an effective study timetable and missed practicing key calculation sets.
Meanwhile, in Year 11 English, repeated use of the same literary features in short responses limited essay depth and left little material for feedback discussion.
A tutor in Tuart Hill noticed a Year 12 student who, after weeks of confusion with normal distribution, confidently solved both textbook and past exam questions independently last session.
Another high schooler, previously hesitant to ask for clarification, is now actively bringing her own questions to lessons and using diagrams to explain concepts—she even tackled some extension chemistry problems unprompted.
Meanwhile, a Year 4 student who struggled with basic multiplication can now multiply by 10, 100, and beyond without pausing, finishing all practice sums correctly on her own this week.