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Adam went well with Jack yesterday. They had another session today. Jack is happy at this stage and said Adam is very smart.Marnie
Year 7 student Mehar reviewed long division techniques and explored how to add, subtract, multiply, and simplify fractions, with practice converting between decimals and fractions using place value.
In Year 10, Gavin focused on expanding and factorising polynomials as well as working with matrices for transformations in Maths Methods revision.
Meanwhile, Alexander in Year 11 prepared for his physics exam by tackling questions on kinematics—especially constant acceleration scenarios—and analyzing energy transfer during collisions.
Several high school students struggled with organization and independent note-taking.
For example, a Year 9 student "did not complete homework given last class" and was not organised with his notetaking from school, which left gaps in revision and meant key formulas for area and perimeter were not available when needed.
In Year 12 Maths Methods, reliance on teacher notes without making concise personal summaries made it difficult to recall transformation rules during SAC preparation.
One senior student also missed opportunities to use feedback—skipping review of incorrect test questions—which led to repeating the same mistakes in new contexts, especially with trigonometry applications.
One Warragul tutor recently noticed Gavin, a Year 12 student, moving from confusion to independence with quadratic inequalities—he now solves them using the discriminant without prompting and can expand polynomials and apply the factor theorem smoothly.
Tyler, working towards a maths redemption task in Year 10, previously struggled with direct and inverse variation but is now confidently setting up trigonometric ratios herself and using both scientific and CAS calculators effectively.
In primary sessions, Mehar has shifted from hesitating over long division to reliably recalling each step; last lesson she completed several division problems on her own, checking her remainders for accuracy.
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.