Four stage model:
1. Understand the problem
2. Devise a plan for solving it.
3. Carry out your plan.
4. Look back to examine the solution.
P I E Plan Implement Evaluate
Strategies
1. Act It Out
2. Make a Drawing or Diagram
3. Look for a Pattern
4. Construct a Table
5. Account Systematically for All Possibilities
6. Guess and Check
7. Work Backward
8. Identify Wanted, Given, and Needed Information
9. Write an Open Sentence
10. Solve a Simpler or Similar Problem
11. Change Your Point of View
When planning, include problems with these characteristics:
Problems that contain superfluous or insufficient information:
There are 28 students in the class, 15 boys and
13 girls. 3 are absent.
Why are the worst behaved children never
absent?
Problems that involve estimation:
How long will it take me to memorize 7 problem
solving strategies?
Problems that require students to make choices about the degree of accuracy
required:
How many points do I need to earn a B+
in the class?
Problems that involve practical applications of mathematics to consumer
or
business situations:
After buying 3 textbooks, will I still have enough
money for dinner?
Problems that require students to conceptualize very large or very small
numbers:
How many words in textbooks will I have to read
to earn my degree?
Problems that are based on students’ interests or events in their environment
or can be personalized by adding students’ names:
How late can I leave my house and still get to
class 5 minutes early?
Problems that involve logic, reasoning, testing of conjectures, and
reasonableness of information:
If the average grade is 88%, and half the students
earned an A, what were
the scores of the
other 12 students?
Problems that have no mathematical answer (but seem to):
There are 25 students in the class whose average
age is 27 years old.
How many have already
taught?
Problems that are multistep or require the use of more than one strategy
to
attain the solution:
If the students work in pairs to present a problem
and each presentation is 7 minutes,
how long will it take
for every student to present?
Problems requiring decision making as a result of the outcome.
I have $6.00. Where am I going to eat dinner
tonight?