Details regarding the seminar are available via our main website:
www.boredofstudies.org/seminar04.php
It's being run by Jeff Geha (maths extraordinaire) - yes, he's the author of the Excel books, and has done a number of other works too (HSC tips, past paper analyses, etc). He's been tutoring maths for the past few years, and all his students have had exceptional HSC results. Quite the maths guru. He's a friendly guy too.
We'll provide a proper itinerary for the seminar soon, but in brief - Jeff will initially run through the crucial parts of each of the examinable topics to fill in all the gaps and make sure you haven't missed anything. After each topic, he'll work through challenging examples of questions relevant to that topic from past HSC exams and trial papers, providing tips on how best to answer them along the way.
There'll also be a session on how to maximise your marks in the exam. Jeff has said (and most teachers agree) that it's amazing how many students miss out on incremental marks simply because they don't provide 'complete' answers to questions (i.e. demonstrating the full methodology, without leaving out any steps; crossing every 't' and dotting every 'i').
And to finish the seminar, there will be an opportunity (during the last hour or so) for students to ask Jeff any particularly difficult questions they've been struggling with. The idea isn't for Jeff to just provide a worked solution - anyone can obtain that. He'll actually be explaining the logic and thought processes you need to go through in order to solve the problem yourself. The aim is to provide a full understanding of how the problem is actually solved. Most of these questions will also benefit the other students who are attending (what is hard for some is usually hard for most). Just prepare the questions beforehand, and we'll have a roving microphone (or something similar) going around the theatre.
Hope that answers your question. I'd obviously encourage you to come along - we've already had a number of registrations, and I'm not sure how long the places will last. We may have to run a second set of seminars if we get too many people.
It'll be fun too.