If scrambled solutions are about building a logical skeleton, Error Analysis is about developing the "mathematical immune system." In this activity, students are given a fully solved problem that contains exactly one intentional mistake. Their job is not to solve the problem, but to find the error, fix it, and explain why the original "mathematician" made that choice.
Many students view math through a lens of "fragile perfection"—if they make one mistake, the whole endeavor is a failure. This creates high anxiety. Error Analysis flips the script by making the mistake the object of study rather than a personal failing.
From a brain-based perspective, this technique triggers comparative thinking. To find an error, a student must mentally run the correct procedure alongside the flawed one. This dual-processing strengthens their understanding of the "boundary conditions" of a rule—knowing not just what to do, but what not to do and why. The error chosen should be a high-frequency misconception. For instance, many students when doing the distributive property, forget to distribute the outside term across both inside terms. Students for a problem like 3(x + 5) will say it equals 3x + 5, not 3x + 15.
One suggestion is to create the "math autopsy which is a wonderful collaborative activity for small groups. Begin by giving each group a "Case File" (a worksheet) featuring a character—let’s call him "Messy Marvin"—who has consistently gotten the wrong answer. Students must use a red pen to circle the exact line where Marvin made his mistake. In a dedicated column, students must rewrite the problem correctly and write a "note to Marvin" explaining the rule he forgot. This forces the use of mathematical vocabulary (e.g., "Marvin, you forgot to use the Inverse Property...").
In a digital environment, Error Analysis can be made highly interactive, so the second method is called "Spot the Bot". Use the Desmos Activity Builder to show a pre-animated solution. Students can use the "Sketch" tool to circle the error directly on the screen. Or you can present a solved problem with four different potential "fixes." Students vote on which fix actually addresses the root cause of the error. Or you could give students a solution generated by an AI that contains a subtle logical hallucination. Have them "peer review" the AI's work.
Error Analysis is the perfect companion to Scrambled Solutions. While you use scrambled solutions during the Bridge Phase to build logic, you use Error Analysis during the Refinement Phase (the end of a lesson or the start of the next day).
It is especially effective as a "Do Now" or "Bell Ringer." By starting class with a "broken" problem, you immediately engage the students' critical thinking. It signals that the classroom is a safe place to discuss mistakes, and it prepares their brains to be on the lookout for those same pitfalls in their own work.
Experts in any field—whether they are surgeons, engineers, or mathematicians—are defined by their ability to self-correct. By intentionally bringing errors into the light, we move students away from "answer-getting" and toward "sense-making." When a student can explain why a mistake happened, they are no longer just following a recipe; they are becoming the chef.