Table of Contents

being systematic about solving problems

This is relevant from primary school all the way through high school and university and beyond, finding solutions in all kinds of professional tasks — science, business, design, engineering, computers, policy making and management — pretty much any field which requires thought and initiative rather than simply carrying out repetitive set actions. It is one of the ways we analyse and talk about the world.

It is also at the centre of the maths syllabus, every year from infants to year 12.

If you are in primary school … some of the language I am using here is talking to older students, don’t worry about that — skip those parts — you have plenty of time to learn about that stuff later.

Just have a go, jump into one of the easier problems in this collection: problemsolvingwall200.pdf — they go from primary school to senior high school level — find one you think might be interesting.

If you are further along this journey dig a little deeper. Return to it later, much of the maths you are studying is related to these ideas. By the time you leave school I hope you have a strong sense of how to approach a problem more formally, how to use a mathematical model to understand the relationships and find a solution.

a summary of the main ideas

What exactly is being asked?

What form of answer is called for?

What is required to find this value? (or values, or details in a diagram or graph)

What facts have you been given?

Combine these facts and relationships

it is all about being systematic —

assembling what you know, expressing it clearly and succinctly, remembering some rules, doing a bit of manipulation

then giving an answer to the actual questionalways in an appropriate form!

finally — check that your answer is sensible!

Remember: if the question has lots of parts some information will only be needed for one little part (or not at all).

problem solving in tests

formula sheets