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Year 4 student Helena worked on telling time to the minute and converting between kilograms and grams, using both written practice and hands-on activities.
In Year 8, Baylee tackled converting improper fractions to mixed numbers as well as finding percentages of whole numbers by turning percentages into fractions for calculation.
For Year 10, Cameron focused on planning a creative response for Station Eleven, discussing possible text types and narrative structure relevant to his upcoming English assessment.
A Year 12 English student showed hesitance in developing his own analysis, often defaulting to retelling scenes rather than expanding with original ideas or weaving in relevant quotes. "He worried about writing something that did not occur in the text," a tutor noted, which led to drafts lacking deeper insight.
In Year 8 maths, another student's written work on fractions and area was difficult to follow due to skipped steps and inconsistent layout; errors went unnoticed until problems were reworked aloud together.
For both, avoiding full working or holding back ideas meant time spent correcting basics rather than pushing into new skills or more complex tasks.
One Yarra Glen tutor noticed that a Year 11 student, Cameron, is now annotating texts more independently—he highlights quotes linked to key themes and recently started explaining why an author makes particular choices, after previously just listing techniques.
Another high school win: Theo has begun forming his own opinions about literature, rather than simply rephrasing material; in essay planning, he recalled examples from both main and minor characters for richer analysis.
Meanwhile, Baylee in Year 6 now asks for trickier multiplication problems during sessions, showing initiative and moving past her earlier reluctance to tackle harder maths questions.