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I was reluctant to get a tutor for my son, I did not care for robotic rote learning for tests. Our tutor through Ezymathtutoring teaches every topic at least 4 different ways and my son has developed a deep understanding of numeracy in a very short time. At the beginning of the year he was struggling to keep up, now he is ahead of his year level and thinks maths is fun. This is the best money we have ever spent, and we love our tutor, and the follow up support we get from the company. A great investment, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it.Kylie Lister Fiorito
Year 7 student Sarah worked through equations of lines and strategies for solving linear equations while preparing for an upcoming test.
Year 10 student Nick focused on binomial theorem applications and differential calculus, tackling practice questions involving expansion and basic differentiation.
For Year 11, Jessica reviewed integral calculus by working through problems that involved finding the area under a curve and then moved on to challenging trigonometry questions with the sine and cosine rules.
Several students in Years 11 and 12 showed a reluctance to attempt new or challenging questions during maths revision, often focusing only on familiar problem types; as one tutor noted, "Kieron needs to attempt more questions and post questions on our shared document when stuck."
In Year 9 science, Nick did not bring his online book for two sessions in a row, making it difficult to review key material together.
Jessica (Year 10) repeatedly left homework incomplete, which meant lesson time was spent re-explaining previously covered concepts instead of progressing further.
A tutor in Woodforde recently noticed some encouraging changes across different year levels. For one high school student, Kieron, there's been a shift from leaving tough questions unfinished to actively attempting extra problems on his own during sessions—a real step up in independence compared to earlier weeks.
Olivia, also in high school, who used to get stuck and wait for answers, now brings specific questions from her revision and works through them methodically until she understands the process herself.
Meanwhile, Jessica (Year 7) showed a breakthrough by grasping ratios of sides after repeated struggles—she managed to finish all chapter questions without hesitation this time.