The tutoring is going well. Amy has told me that she is already understanding more and it's helping.Mariela
Year 5 student Elise practised adding and subtracting fractions with unlike denominators and refreshed her skills on converting mixed numbers to improper fractions.
In Year 9, Amelie focused on solving problems involving functions, including domain and range, and worked through exercises on the distance and midpoint formulas using worksheets.
Meanwhile, Year 10 student Michael revised key algebraic concepts by checking challenging test questions and tackling additional practice problems that targeted his weaker areas.
In Year 6 English, one student often answered comprehension questions before reading them fully—she continues to do this, despite my constant insistence that she read all text on the worksheet. This led to confusion and incomplete answers.
In Year 9 Maths, messy or haphazard working made revision difficult; both of us struggled to understand it, so errors were hard to track down during problem-solving.
A Year 11 student missed homework deadlines, meaning lesson time was lost catching up instead of advancing skills.
After setbacks in algebra, another hesitated to show their steps for fear of being wrong—this slowed learning and eroded confidence mid-session.
A tutor in Moil recently noticed some strong shifts in how students approach their work. In Year 10 maths, Amelie, who used to second-guess herself on function and quadratic problems, now confidently identifies which concepts to apply and even corrects her own test errors without prompting.
Meanwhile, Elise (Year 7) struggled with structuring essays but has begun planning her writing much more logically—her outlines are now detailed and well organised, a big leap from her earlier confusion.
For a younger student, Michael in Year 4 started expanding his own creative story at home after only drafting together during the session.