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My son Hugh has found Emmad really helpful and already gaining more confidence in maths. Hugh has said he really likes Emmad and looks forward to him coming, which does make a difference. I personally have found Emmad to be very polite, friendly and patient.Colleen Sincock, Henley Beach
Year 9 student Samuel worked through the full linear equations topic—covering general form, finding intercepts, calculating gradients, and sketching/interpreting graphs—and also received support with a maths assignment scaffold and biology test revision.
In Year 6, Emily practised long multiplication and division (including remainders), explored area and perimeter of rectangles, and was introduced to periodic table basics such as atomic mass, number, and charge.
Another high schooler revised all index laws before moving on to simple interest calculations using real-world examples.
Homework completion was a recurring issue across both primary and high school years.
For example, a Year 7 student repeatedly did not bring or finish assigned homework, which left her unprepared for double-digit multiplication tasks in the next lesson ("student still has not shown physical proof to tutor about completed homework").
In Year 10 mathematics, one student relied on "guessing answers instead of trying to solve them," especially with problem-solving questions—this avoidance meant gaps in understanding lingered into revision.
A senior student in biology needed reminders to expand written sections and struggled to express ideas clearly during reports, making feedback hard to apply in practice.
One West Beach tutor noticed Samuel, a high school student, making real strides in maths: he now solves percentage increase and decrease problems more quickly than before and was able to explain his reasoning with less prompting.
Another highlight came from Emily, also in high school, who initially struggled with operations involving fractions but recently picked up the butterfly method for adding and subtracting them—she can now tackle these independently during sessions.
Meanwhile, Sia (Year 3) started off unsure about identifying shapes but finished her lesson confidently naming sides, faces, and edges using examples from around the house.