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Art of problem solving brings its problem-solving teaching methods to local academic centers, with one virtual campus and 15 locations in the us, and more being added every year., we challenge students.

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Art of Problem Solving has been a leader in math education for high-performing students since 1993. We launched AoPS Academy in 2016 to bring our rigorous curriculum and expert instructors into classrooms around the United States. With campuses in 8 states (and growing!), our approach nurtures a love for complex problem solving, which is fully incorporated into all our math, science, and language arts courses. Most importantly, our students become part of a community of motivated learners that helps elevate them to new heights.

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The Art of Problem Solving, Vol. 1: The Basics

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Richard Rusczyk

The Art of Problem Solving, Vol. 1: The Basics Paperback – August 1, 2006

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  • Part of series Art of Problem Solving
  • Print length 288 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher AoPS Incorporated
  • Publication date August 1, 2006
  • Dimensions 8.5 x 0.75 x 11 inches
  • ISBN-10 0977304566
  • ISBN-13 978-0977304561
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  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ AoPS Incorporated; 7th edition (August 1, 2006)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 288 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0977304566
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0977304561
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.45 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.5 x 0.75 x 11 inches
  • #459 in Decision-Making & Problem Solving
  • #1,635 in Education Theory (Books)

About the author

Richard rusczyk.

Richard Rusczyk founded Art of Problem Solving (AoPS) in 2003 to create interactive educational opportunities for avid math students. Richard is one of the co-authors of the Art of Problem Solving classic textbooks, author of Art of Problem Solving's Introduction to Algebra, Introduction to Geometry, and Precalculus textbooks, co-author of Art of Problem Solving's Intermediate Algebra and Prealgebra, one of the co-creators of the Mandelbrot Competition, and a past Director of the USA Mathematical Talent Search. He was a participant in National MATHCOUNTS, a three-time participant in the Math Olympiad Summer Program, and a USA Mathematical Olympiad winner (1989). He graduated from Princeton University in 1993, and worked as a bond trader for D.E. Shaw & Company for four years. AoPS marks Richard's return to his vocation: educating motivated students.

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For everyone whose relationship with mathematics is distant or broken, Jo Boaler , a professor at Stanford Graduate School of Education (GSE), has ideas for repairing it. She particularly wants young people to feel comfortable with numbers from the start – to approach the subject with playfulness and curiosity, not anxiety or dread.

“Most people have only ever experienced what I call narrow mathematics – a set of procedures they need to follow, at speed,” Boaler says. “Mathematics should be flexible, conceptual, a place where we play with ideas and make connections. If we open it up and invite more creativity, more diverse thinking, we can completely transform the experience.”

Boaler, the Nomellini and Olivier Professor of Education at the GSE, is the co-founder and faculty director of Youcubed , a Stanford research center that provides resources for math learning that has reached more than 230 million students in over 140 countries. In 2013 Boaler, a former high school math teacher, produced How to Learn Math , the first massive open online course (MOOC) on mathematics education. She leads workshops and leadership summits for teachers and administrators, and her online courses have been taken by over a million users.

In her new book, Math-ish: Finding Creativity, Diversity, and Meaning in Mathematics , Boaler argues for a broad, inclusive approach to math education, offering strategies and activities for learners at any age. We spoke with her about why creativity is an important part of mathematics, the impact of representing numbers visually and physically, and how what she calls “ishing” a math problem can help students make better sense of the answer.

What do you mean by “math-ish” thinking?

It’s a way of thinking about numbers in the real world, which are usually imprecise estimates. If someone asks how old you are, how warm it is outside, how long it takes to drive to the airport – these are generally answered with what I call “ish” numbers, and that’s very different from the way we use and learn numbers in school.

In the book I share an example of a multiple-choice question from a nationwide exam where students are asked to estimate the sum of two fractions: 12/13 + 7/8. They’re given four choices for the closest answer: 1, 2, 19, or 21. Each of the fractions in the question is very close to 1, so the answer would be 2 – but the most common answer 13-year-olds gave was 19. The second most common was 21.

I’m not surprised, because when students learn fractions, they often don’t learn to think conceptually or to consider the relationship between the numerator or denominator. They learn rules about creating common denominators and adding or subtracting the numerators, without making sense of the fraction as a whole. But stepping back and judging whether a calculation is reasonable might be the most valuable mathematical skill a person can develop.

But don’t you also risk sending the message that mathematical precision isn’t important?

I’m not saying precision isn’t important. What I’m suggesting is that we ask students to estimate before they calculate, so when they come up with a precise answer, they’ll have a real sense for whether it makes sense. This also helps students learn how to move between big-picture and focused thinking, which are two different but equally important modes of reasoning.

Some people ask me, “Isn’t ‘ishing’ just estimating?” It is, but when we ask students to estimate, they often groan, thinking it’s yet another mathematical method. But when we ask them to “ish” a number, they're more willing to offer their thinking.

Ishing helps students develop a sense for numbers and shapes. It can help soften the sharp edges in mathematics, making it easier for kids to jump in and engage. It can buffer students against the dangers of perfectionism, which we know can be a damaging mindset. I think we all need a little more ish in our lives.

You also argue that mathematics should be taught in more visual ways. What do you mean by that?

For most people, mathematics is an almost entirely symbolic, numerical experience. Any visuals are usually sterile images in a textbook, showing bisecting angles, or circles divided into slices. But the way we function in life is by developing models of things in our minds. Take a stapler: Knowing what it looks like, what it feels and sounds like, how to interact with it, how it changes things – all of that contributes to our understanding of how it works.

There’s an activity we do with middle-school students where we show them an image of a 4 x 4 x 4 cm cube made up of smaller 1 cm cubes, like a Rubik’s Cube. The larger cube is dipped into a can of blue paint, and we ask the students, if they could take apart the little cubes, how many sides would be painted blue? Sometimes we give the students sugar cubes and have them physically build a larger 4 x 4 x 4 cube. This is an activity that leads into algebraic thinking.

Some years back we were interviewing students a year after they’d done that activity in our summer camp and asked what had stayed with them. One student said, “I’m in geometry class now, and I still remember that sugar cube, what it looked like and felt like.” His class had been asked to estimate the volume of their shoes, and he said he’d imagined his shoes filled with 1 cm sugar cubes in order to solve that question. He had built a mental model of a cube.

When we learn about cubes, most of us don’t get to see and manipulate them. When we learn about square roots, we don’t take squares and look at their diagonals. We just manipulate numbers.

I wonder if people consider the physical representations more appropriate for younger kids.

That’s the thing – elementary school teachers are amazing at giving kids those experiences, but it dies out in middle school, and by high school it’s all symbolic. There’s a myth that there’s a hierarchy of sophistication where you start out with visual and physical representations and then build up to the symbolic. But so much of high-level mathematical work now is visual. Here in Silicon Valley, if you look at Tesla engineers, they're drawing, they're sketching, they're building models, and nobody says that's elementary mathematics.

There’s an example in the book where you’ve asked students how they would calculate 38 x 5 in their heads, and they come up with several different ways of arriving at the same answer. The creativity is fascinating, but wouldn’t it be easier to teach students one standard method?

A depiction of various ways to calculate 38 x 5, numerically and visually.

A depiction of various ways to calculate 38 x 5, numerically and visually. | Courtesy Jo Boaler

That narrow, rigid version of mathematics where there’s only one right approach is what most students experience, and it’s a big part of why people have such math trauma. It keeps them from realizing the full range and power of mathematics. When you only have students blindly memorizing math facts, they’re not developing number sense. They don’t learn how to use numbers flexibly in different situations. It also makes students who think differently believe there’s something wrong with them.

When we open mathematics to acknowledge the different ways a concept or problem can be viewed, we also open the subject to many more students. Mathematical diversity, to me, is a concept that includes both the value of diversity in people and the diverse ways we can see and learn mathematics. When we bring those forms of diversity together, it’s powerful. If we want to value different ways of thinking and problem-solving in the world, we need to embrace mathematical diversity.

IMAGES

  1. How to run a MathCounts club

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  3. Art of problem solving mathcounts by Thompson Leslie

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  4. Art of Problem Solving Calculus Set

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  5. The Art of Problem Solving (Paperback)

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  6. MATHCOUNTS Trainer; National Problems #3

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VIDEO

  1. A Collection of Maths Problem Solving Questions:#350 ((Numbers

  2. Math Encounters

  3. MATHCOUNTS Mini #73 –More Than One Way to Solve a Problem

  4. Art of Problem Solving: Counting with Restrictions Part 1

  5. Art of Problem Solving: Probability and Combinations Part 2

  6. Art of Problem Solving: Counting with Restrictions Part 3

COMMENTS

  1. MathCounts

    MATHCOUNTS curriculum includes arithmetic, algebra, counting, geometry, number theory, probability, and statistics. The focus of MATHCOUNTS curriculum is in developing mathematical problem solving skills. Before 1990, MATHCOUNTS chose particular areas of mathematics to highlight each year before changing the focus of the competition more ...

  2. Art of Problem Solving

    Art of Problem Solving offers two other multifaceted programs. Beast Academy is our comic-based online math curriculum for students ages 6-13. And AoPS Academy brings our methodology to students grades 2-12 through small, in-person classes at local campuses. Through our three programs, AoPS offers the most comprehensive honors math pathway ...

  3. Art of Problem Solving

    the Art of Problem Solving, Volume 1: the Basics. A classic problem solving textbook for students in grades 7-10 who are preparing for contests like MATHCOUNTS and the AMC 8/10/12. Related courses: MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced and AMC 10 Problem Series. the Art of Problem Solving, Volume 1: the Basics Online Book.

  4. PRACTICE PLANS

    An important formula to know, the difference of squares identity is derived geometrically in the video for this practice plan. Mathletes will then try to recognize the difference of squares structure in various expressions and use the identity to find the value. DIFFICULTY: Medium. Download the Mathlete handout.

  5. MATHCOUNTS MINIS

    A video resource created by Art of Problem Solving! Art of Problem Solving's Richard Rusczyk, a MATHCOUNTS alumnus, has been creating MATHCOUNTS Minis videos for more than a decade!Minis provide detailed explanations for MATHCOUNTS problems and their associated math concepts, plus include activity sheets.

  6. Resources

    The MATHCOUNTS Foundation is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that reaches students in grades 6-8 in all US states and territories with 3 extracurricular math programs. More than a quarter million students participate in our programs or use our resources each year. There are many paths to success in math. We help all students discover theirs.

  7. Art of Problem Solving

    The MathCounts Problem Series is a 12 week course designed to prepare highly motivated MathCounts students to solve the most challenging problems in the competition. Each class takes place in the AoPS Virtual Classroom and runs for 90 minutes. The course was written by Mathew Crawford and Richard Rusczyk.Crawford was a national test champion and a member of the national champion Alabama ...

  8. Art of Problem Solving

    MATHCOUNTS Week is a set of activities created by AoPS in collaboration with MATHCOUNTS that took place from 5/11/2020 to 5/15/2020. Some activities include a mock state competition and a Mathcounts Week Countdown Round. Most of the times of the activity are pi time (3:14 PM).

  9. Art of Problem Solving

    Mathematics competitions. Mathematics competitions are contests that typically challenge top mathematics students to solve problems more difficult than those typically tested by standardized tests or in the classroom. Math competitions differ widely in difficulty and content. Most test a broader range of mathematics curriculum and some focus on ...

  10. Art of Problem Solving

    American Mathematics Competitions. The American Mathematics Competitions (AMC) consist of a series of increasingly difficult tests for students in middle school and high school. The AMC sets the standard in the United States for talented high school students of mathematics. The AMC curriculum is both comprehensive and modern.

  11. Art of Problem Solving

    ITMO/AITMO ( [Asian] International Teenagers Mathematical Olympiad) Directory of Problems w/ Solutions. Archive from 2005 to 2017. Every two years, except 2007. Mathematics. English. Taiwanese. IWYMIC (The International World Youth Mathematics Intercity Competition) All Problems Since 1999 w/ Solutions.

  12. MATHCOUNTS Trainer

    MATHCOUNTS Trainer had trouble initializing your user data. You may have cookies disabled. ... Art of Problem Solving is an ACS WASC Accredited School. aops programs. AoPS Online. Beast Academy. AoPS Academy. About. About AoPS. Our Team. Our History. Jobs. AoPS Blog. Site Info. Terms.

  13. Art of Problem Solving

    1961 IMO Problems/Problem 1. 1966 IMO Problems/Problem 5. 1968 IMO Problems/Problem 3. 1968 IMO Problems/Problem 5. 1970 Canadian MO Problems/Problem 1. 1970 IMO Problems/Problem 2. 1971 Canadian MO Problems/Problem 5. 1972 IMO Problems/Problem 5. 1972 USAMO Problems/Problem 4.

  14. AoPS Academy

    Art of Problem Solving has been a leader in math education for high-performing students since 1993. We launched AoPS Academy in 2016 to bring our rigorous curriculum and expert instructors into classrooms around the United States. With campuses in 8 states (and growing!), our approach nurtures a love for complex problem solving, which is fully ...

  15. Art of Problem Solving

    AoPS For The Win! (FTW) is a fun way to practice your math skills while competing with other players. There are two types of games, the normal game where you can compete against many players and the Countdown game, which is a head-to-head competition modeled after the MATHCOUNTS ® Countdown round. In cooperation with MATHCOUNTS ®, many of the ...

  16. FUN PROBLEM-SOLVING TECHNIQUES

    FUN PROBLEM-SOLVING TECHNIQUES. Being able to take multiple different approaches to solve problems is an invaluable skill. In this problem set, Mathletes will look at four techniques - creating a model, acting out a situation, drawing a picture and making a list. Click here to download the pdf version of the Fun Problem-Solving Techniques ...

  17. Art of Problem Solving

    Advanced Olympiad Inequalities: Algebraic & Geometric Olympiad Inequalities by Alijadallah Belabess. Algebraic Inequalities - Old And New Methods - Vasile Cirtoaje. Old And New inequalities volume 1 - Titu Andreescu, Vasile Cirtoaje, Gabriel Dospinescu, Mircea Lascu. Old And New Inequalities volume 2 - Vo Quoc Ba Can, Cosmin Pohoata.

  18. The Art of Problem Solving, Vol. 1: The Basics

    The Art of Problem Solving, Volume 1, is the classic problem solving textbook used by many successful MATHCOUNTS programs, and have been an important building block for students who, like the authors, performed well enough on the American Mathematics Contest series to qualify for the Math Olympiad Summer Program which trains students for the United States International Math Olympiad team.

  19. Richard Rusczyk

    Richard Rusczyk (/ ˈ r ʌ s ɪ k /; Polish: [ˈrustʂɨk]; born September 21, 1971) is the founder and chief executive officer of Art of Problem Solving Inc. (as well as the website, which serves as a mathematics forum and place to hold online classes) and a co-author of the Art of Problem Solving textbooks. Rusczyk was a national Mathcounts participant in 1985, and he won the USA Math ...

  20. Art of Problem Solving

    MATHCOUNTS Trainer AoPS Practice Contests AoPS Wiki LaTeX TeXeR MIT PRIMES/CrowdMath Keep Learning. contests on aops AMC MATHCOUNTS Other Contests. news and information AoPS Blog Emergency Homeschool Resources Podcast: Raising Problem Solvers. ... Art of Problem Solving is an

  21. The case for 'math-ish' thinking

    The case for 'math-ish' thinking. In a new book, Jo Boaler argues for a more flexible, creative approach to math. "Stepping back and judging whether a calculation is reasonable might be the ...

  22. Math Message Boards FAQ & Community Help

    Here, we discuss math competitions/math opportunities, work through original and challenging math problems, and provide the latest updates on our own outreach events! This Discord server is welcome to all students, regardless of gender background or personal identity. Join Here! H. Handout WAMGM. Aritra12 2.