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Solving problems The three strands of Using and Applying Problem solving purely mathematical; based on real life Communicating includes interpreting; formulating; discussing and recording maths and presenting findings Reasoning includes making and testing hypotheses; spotting patterns; generalising; explaining and justifying How do you teach problem solving? Give children a method they can always use? Read Underline (or Understand) Calculate (or Choose) Solve Answer Check Y3/4 Read the problem Underline (or understand) Calculate (or choose the operation) Solve the problem Answer the problem Check the answer 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. What do I know? What do I want to know? What can I work out? Give it a try out! Is that the problem done? If not go back to number 1. 1. What do I know? Tripods have 3 legs, Bipods have 2 legs and the total number of legs is 23 2. What do I want to know? How many Tripods and Bipods there have to be if their legs add up to 23 3. What can I work out? I know it’s more than 1 Tripod and 1 Bipod because that only adds up to 5 legs. I can work out how many legs there are on 2 Tripods and 2 Bipods. 4. Give it a try out! Argh…That only adds up to 10. 5. Is that the problem done? No 6. If not go back to number 1. 1. What do I know? That there are more than 2 Tripods and 2 Bipods 2. What do I want to know? How many legs on 3, 4, 5…Tripods and Bipods 3. What can I work out? Multiples of 3 and multiples of 2 that add up to 23 4. Give it a try out! Tripods 1 3 legs 2 6 legs 3 9 legs 4 12 legs 5 15 legs 6 18 legs 7 21 legs Answer: 3 Tripods (9 legs) and 7 Bipods (14 legs), or 5 Tripods (15 legs) and 4 Bipods (8 legs). Bipods 1 2 legs 2 4 legs 3 6 legs 4 8 legs 5 10 legs 6 12 legs 7 14 legs 8 16 legs 9 18 legs 10 20 legs 11 22 legs Y3 Read the problem Underline (or understand) Calculate (or choose the operation) Solve the problem Answer the problem Check the answer Read 1. What do I know? Underline (or Understand) 2. What do I want to know? Calculate (or Choose) 3. What can I work out? Solveit a try out! 4. Give 5. Is that the problem done? Answer 6. If not go back to number 1. Check Types of problems One step problems Multi step word problems Problems that require the interpretation of pictures, tables or graphs, interpolating and extrapolating, within and beyond what is known. Problems that require lists to identify patterns within which relationships or totals can be found Puzzle-type problems that require some reasoning and involve some train of logical thought Puzzle-type problems that require some reasoning and employ deduction from known facts 72-18 54 £5.00 - £1.05 = £3.95 £7.00 - £3.95 = £3.05 3.05 All the angles would be 108° if it was regular cheetah leopard and wildcat 2 4 banana 13 15 Work out how much the class spends in a week, a month and a year on chocolate. Extrapolate how much the whole school spends in a year. Comic Relief/Fairtrade resources Lesson plan: http://www.papapaa.org/pdf/ks2_1a_plan.pdf Website: http://www.papapaa.org/ ‘A goldfish costs £1.80 and an angel fish costs £1.40. Nasreen paid £20 for some fish. How many of each fish did she buy?’ Goldfish at £1.80 each Angel fish at £1.40 each 1 £1.80 2 £3.60 3 £5.40 4 £7.20 5 £9.00 6 £10.80 7 £12.60 8 £14.40 9 £16.20 10 £18.00 11 £19.80 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 £1.40 £2.80 £4.20 £5.60 £7.00 £8.40 £9.80 £11.20 £12.60 £14.00 £15.40 £16.80 £18.20 £19.60 A solution in under 3 minutes could get you a job with Microsoft! U2 has a concert that starts in 17 minutes and they must all cross a bridge to get there. All four men begin on the same side of the bridge. It is night. There is one flashlight. A maximum of two people can cross at one time. Any party who crosses, either 1 or 2 people, must have the flashlight with them. The flashlight must be walked back and forth, it cannot be thrown, etc. Each band member walks at a different speed. Bono takes 1 minute to cross Edge takes 2 minutes to cross Adam takes 5 minutes to cross Larry takes 10 minutes to cross How can the band get to the concert in time? Solution Bono and Edge go over, Bono comes back Bono takes 1 minute to cross Edge takes 2 minutes to cross Adam takes 5 minutes to cross Larry takes 10 minutes to cross = 3 mins Larry and Adam go over, Edge comes back = 12 mins Bono and Edge go over = 2 mins Total time taken = 17 mins What is a smile worth? A smile is worth £15. (A frown is worth £10 and a neutral face is worth £12) Here is some information about my four friends: Nicky is older than Jason, Jason is older than Nathan, Nathan is younger than Nicky and Sam is older than Nicky. Can you list my friends from oldest to youngest? Sam Nicky Jason Nathan Types of problems One step problems Multi step word problems Problems that require the interpretation of pictures, tables or graphs, interpolating and extrapolating, within and beyond what is known. Problems that require lists to identify patterns within which relationships or totals can be found Puzzle-type problems that require some reasoning and involve some train of logical thought Puzzle-type problems that require some reasoning and employ deduction from known facts Not just word problems! Children need to experience a wide variety of problem types. Children need to be taught how to recognise, access and solve each problem type Children need to be taught how to justify and communicate their understanding and reasoning Reasoning, justifying and communicating should be integral to problem solving lessons Communicating includes interpreting; formulating; discussing and recording maths and presenting findings True or false? Convince yourself (mental justification) Convince a friend (oral justification) Convince a friend in writing (informal written justification) Convince the teacher (formal written justification) Convince Scenario: The Mathematical Association A heptagon is a 7 sided polygon with interior angles that add to 720 degrees Is this true or false? More ‘true/false’ questions in separate PowerPoint! A heptagon is a 7 sided polygon with interior angles that add to 720 degrees FALSE • A heptagon is a seven sided polygon. • It can be divided into 5 triangles. • The sum of the interior angles in a triangle is 180. 180° 180° 180° 180° 180° • 5 x 180 = 900 Therefore, a heptagon is a 7 sided polygon with interior angles that add to 900 degrees. Why do angles in a triangle always add up to 180°? Reasoning includes making and testing hypotheses; spotting patterns; generalising; explaining and justifying Identifying patterns Pattern objectives… From YR Use shapes to describe and make models, pictures and patterns. Count in twos. …to Y6 Recognise and extend number sequences such as square and triangular numbers. Count on and back in steps of 0.1, 0.2, 0.25, 0.5 and then back. Solve mathematical problems or puzzles. Recognise patterns and generalise. Solve mathematical problems or puzzles. Recognise patterns and generalise. Pascal’s triangle Square and triangular numbers Perfect numbers Prime numbers Consecutive numbers Shape Number sequences Identifying patterns and relationships If it takes 4 women 6 days to plough five fields how long will it take the men to collect the potatoes? -32 – 45 = -77 -77 ÷ 7 = -11 45 + 22 = 67 67 98 T = 2R - 2 Points to note Teach children the skills to recognise and access different problem types. Use a range of closed, open problems and investigations Encourage children to be systematic in their recording Teach children how to communicate their understanding Teach or consolidate other mathematical topics through pattern If children are having difficulty solving problems you need to find out: is it the underlying maths they are struggling with? are they able to identify the problem type and have they been taught the skills to access it? are they having difficulty, recording, reasoning or communicating their thoughts? do they know how to work systematically? Children will not learn how to problem solve, communicate or reason simply through answering word problems. Children will not become proficient problem solvers simply because they understand what RUCSAC stands for.