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Thanks Alvin, we can see that charlotte is improving and her teachers are reporting more confidence in class.Emma
Year 6 Ella revised fraction and percentage calculations, then practiced multiplying larger numbers without a calculator.
Year 8 Stefan focused on solving degree-2 algebraic operations and reviewed probability concepts using assignment questions.
For Year 9 Chloe, the session covered challenging real-life applications of algebra and introduced persuasive writing structures for her upcoming English task.
Several high school students are still relying on calculators for quick maths, even with basic multiplication and fractions.
For example, one Year 9 student "needed a multiplication sheet to get through practice questions," which slowed her progress in algebra.
In Year 10, messy working out—especially when converting dimensions—meant that small mistakes went unnoticed until the final answer.
One senior student preparing for a test hesitated to attempt worded problems independently, missing chances to build confidence before assessment week.
Meanwhile, a Year 8 student often doubted their first steps and erased correct work out of uncertainty during algebra revision.
One Unley tutor noticed a Year 10 student who used to wait for hints now volunteering her own ideas when tackling new maths problems, needing fewer prompts each week.
A Year 11 student recently worked through an algebra worksheet and, instead of relying on the tutor to find mistakes, identified exactly where she'd gone wrong and corrected it herself—a big shift from previous sessions where she needed step-by-step guidance.
Meanwhile, in Year 4 English, a younger learner who previously stuck to simple vocabulary is now swapping in synonyms independently during writing tasks and recalling concepts taught last week without reminders.