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Great report - Niamh is fantastic - thxNicky, Rose Bay
Year 8 student Michael revised algebra questions in preparation for an upcoming test and practiced solving equations involving both x and y.
For Year 9, Sasha focused on ratios and rates by reviewing her topic test and term exam paper, identifying areas to improve before finals.
Meanwhile, Roy in Year 10 worked through a holiday homework booklet covering algebraic techniques and coordinate geometry to consolidate his understanding ahead of the new term.
In Year 9, one student's algebra progress was limited by messy written work; as a tutor observed, "needs to get used to setting out work properly—linear equations in most cases will need to be solved on paper rather than just mentally."
Meanwhile, a Year 11 student preparing for exams struggled with time management and did not consistently check their answers under timed conditions, which led to repeated minor errors.
In Year 6 maths sessions, incomplete working made it hard for the tutor to identify where confusion began when dividing fractions. In those moments, confidence dropped and valuable learning opportunities slipped past.
During a recent Watsons Bay tutoring session, Roy, a high school student, confidently tackled algebra problems he'd struggled with at the start—he revisited those same questions and solved them independently this time.
Another tutor noted that Sasha, also in high school, now actively identifies her own mistakes and is keen to fix them during sessions, a shift from earlier weeks when she was hesitant to speak up about errors.
Meanwhile, Zane in Year 3 has shown a big change in attitude: instead of getting discouraged by wrong answers, he keeps trying until he gets it right.
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.