Friday, April 24, 2026

The Language Trap: Decoding "More Than" and "Less Than"


If you’ve ever seen a student read the phrase "5 more than x is 12" and immediately write , only to see them do the exact same thing for "5 more than x is greater than 12," you aren’t alone.

For many students, word problems are less about logic and more about "keyword hunting." They see "more than" and instinctively reach for the plus sign. They see "less than" and prepare to subtract. The challenge isn't that they don't know the math; it's that they don't recognize the grammar of inequalities.

Here is how to help students distinguish between an operation (addition/subtraction) and a relationship (inequality).

The most powerful tool in a student’s arsenal is the word "is." In the English language, "is" acts as a bridge to a comparison.

  • The Operation (Action): "Six more than a number."

    • There is no "is." This is an incomplete thought, a mathematical phrase. It translates to .

  • The Inequality (Relationship): "Six more than a number is greater than ten."

    • The "is" changes the "more than" from an instruction to add into a statement of comparison.

The Strategy: Have students circle the verb in every word problem. If they find "is," "was," or "will be" attached to the comparative phrase, they are likely dealing with an inequality or an equation, not just an expression.

When students think of "more than" as addition, they are thinking of a destination. When they think of it as an inequality, they need to think of a region.

Ask your students: "If I have more than $5, do I have exactly $6?" The answer, of course, is "Maybe, but I could also have $100."

By using number line sketches in their journals, students can visualize the difference. An operation is a single point moving forward or backward. An inequality is a shaded arrow that covers infinite possibilities.

Teach students to look for limiters. Words like "maximum," "minimum," "at least," and "budget" are red flags for inequalities.

  • Addition context: "Sarah has 5 apples and got 3 more." (She is combining items to find a total).

  • Inequality context: "Sarah needs more than 5 apples to bake a pie." (5 is the threshold, not a part of a sum).

Give students "Switch-Up" drills. Provide two nearly identical sentences and ask them to write the mathematical equivalent for each:

  1. "A number decreased by 10." ()

  2. "A number is less than 10." ()

By placing these side-by-side, students begin to see that the "less than" in the first sentence is an action being performed on the number, while the "is less than" in the second is a boundary the number cannot cross.

Moving students away from keyword hunting requires us to teach them to be "math linguists." When they stop looking for "more" and start looking for the relationship between the values, the confusion between  and  evaporates. It’s not just about the numbers; it’s about what the numbers are allowed to be.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Math Journal: From "I Don’t Know" to "I Noticed..."


The math journal is often the most underutilized tool in the educator's belt. We hand out notebooks with the best intentions, but within a week, they usually become expensive scrap paper or, worse, a graveyard for copied notes and "I don't know" shrugs.

To turn journaling into a meaningful cognitive exercise, we have to shift the focus from documentation to dialogue. If you want students to actually write, you need to lower the barrier to entry while raising the ceiling for curiosity.

The biggest obstacle to math writing is the intimidation of a blank grid. When a student says "I don't know," they usually mean "I don't know how to start."

Instead of asking, "Explain how you solved this," provide low-floor, high-ceiling prompts. These are entry points that require zero "math facts" but high observation. Use sentence starters like:

  • "I noticed that..."

  • "This reminds me of..."

  • "I’m still wondering why..."

By shifting the prompt from a "correctness" check to an "observation" check, you remove the fear of being wrong.

Consider using a "Which One Doesn't Belong" activity. Visual prompts are the gold standard for math journaling. Present four different geometric shapes, numbers, or graphs.

There is no single right answer, which is the secret sauce. When a student has to justify why the top-left square doesn't belong because it’s the only one without a prime number, they aren't just "writing math"—they are building an argument. This builds the "writing muscle" without the pressure of a multi-step word problem.

Then there is the "Crayon and Ink" method. because journaling shouldn't look like a textbook. Encourage students to use what I call the multimodal approach:

  • The Sketch: Draw a picture of the problem.

  • The Logic: Use arrows to show how one idea flows to the next.

  • The Language: Write the "story" of the number.

If a student is stuck on the words, tell them to draw the "action" of the math first. Once the visual is down, the words usually follow.

Students won't value the journal if it’s a "black hole" where work goes to die. You don't need to grade every entry for grammar—in fact, please don't—but you should respond.

Try "interactive journaling." Every Friday, collect five journals and write a one-sentence response: "I love how you visualized the fraction as a kit-kat bar!" This turns the journal into a private conversation between the mathematician (the student) and the mentor (you).

Once students are comfortable writing, up the ante. The best way to move past "repeating notes" is the Convince Me prompt.

“The answer is 42. Convince me that any other answer is impossible.”

This forces the student to move from passive recording to active defense. They can’t copy their notes to answer that; they have to understand the boundaries of the concept.  Math journaling isn't about the math; it’s about the thinking. When we stop treating the journal as a secondary textbook and start treating it as a laboratory for half-baked ideas, the "I don't knows" start to disappear, replaced by the messy, beautiful prose of a student finding their voice.  Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear. Have a great day.

Monday, April 20, 2026

Math News: Why a Little Chaos Helps Robot Swarms Work Better

When we think about robots working together, we often imagine perfect precision—machines moving in straight lines, following exact instructions, and operating in flawless coordination. But new research from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences suggests something surprising: perfection isn’t always the best approach. In fact, adding a bit of randomness—or what researchers describe as a “wiggle”—can actually help robot swarms work more efficiently.

This discovery highlights an interesting idea: sometimes, a little chaos is exactly what keeps things running smoothly. Robot swarms are groups of robots that work together to complete tasks. They are often used in warehouses, manufacturing, and delivery systems where multiple machines move around in the same space. The goal is usually to make work faster and more efficient by increasing the number of robots involved.

However, researchers found that when too many robots operate in a crowded area, they can start to interfere with each other. Instead of speeding things up, the robots begin to block one another, creating traffic jams similar to rush-hour congestion on a busy highway. When each robot follows strict, straight-line paths, even a small delay can quickly cause gridlock. This problem becomes especially noticeable in tight spaces where robots need to move past one another frequently.

Rather than redesigning entire systems or reducing the number of robots, researchers discovered a much simpler solution: allow robots to move with slight randomness. Instead of always following perfectly straight paths, robots were programmed to include small, unpredictable movements—essentially giving them a gentle “wiggle.”

This tiny adjustment made a big difference. The small variations in movement allowed robots to slide past one another more easily, reducing blockages and keeping traffic flowing. Instead of getting stuck in rigid patterns, the robots adapted naturally to changing conditions around them. The result was smoother movement, fewer delays, and better overall efficiency.

At first glance, randomness might seem like the opposite of efficiency. We often associate order and structure with productivity. However, this research shows that flexibility can be just as important as precision.

When robots move in perfectly predictable patterns, they are more likely to collide or block each other in crowded environments. By introducing slight randomness, the system becomes more adaptable. Each robot has a better chance of finding an open path rather than waiting in a line that never moves.

This concept is similar to what happens in everyday life. For example, pedestrians walking through a crowded area naturally adjust their paths, stepping slightly left or right to avoid collisions. That small variation keeps the crowd moving instead of freezing in place.

The findings from this research could have major implications for industries that rely on large numbers of robots. Warehouses that use robotic systems to move packages, factories that rely on automated production lines, and even future delivery systems could benefit from this simple change.

By improving traffic flow among robots, companies may be able to increase productivity without adding more machines or redesigning entire layouts. This could save both time and resources while improving reliability.

Beyond robotics, the idea of introducing controlled randomness may also influence how engineers design other complex systems, including traffic management and crowd movement strategies.

One of the most interesting takeaways from this research is how it challenges the idea that strict order always produces the best results. Sometimes, systems work better when they allow room for flexibility and small adjustments.

Whether in robotics, transportation, or even daily routines, the idea that a little randomness can improve flow is both surprising and practical. In this case, a simple “wiggle” turned out to be the key to solving a complex problem—proving that sometimes, the smartest solution isn’t perfect precision, but thoughtful unpredictability. Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear.  Have a great day.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Error Analysis

While scrambled solutions focus on the order of operations, another powerhouse technique from cognitive science focuses on the accuracy of those operations: Error Analysis (sometimes called "What Went Wrong?").

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.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Scrambled Solution Pt 2.

In the journey from mathematical novice to master, timing is everything. If you introduce a complex task too early, you risk cognitive overload and frustration; if you introduce it too late, it becomes "busy work." Scrambled solutions (also known as Parsons Problems) occupy a unique sweet spot in the teaching process: the Bridge Phase.

To maximize the effectiveness of this strategy, you should insert scrambled solutions at three specific transition points in your lesson cycle.

The most powerful place for a scrambled solution is immediately following your initial direct instruction. After you have modeled a concept and perhaps completed one "mirror" problem together, the student's working memory is still fragile.

Instead of throwing them into a blank-page problem where they might get stuck on the very first step, give them a scrambled solution. This acts as a soft hand-off. It provides the security of having the correct "pieces," but requires the student to engage the logical "gears" to assemble them. It’s the perfect bridge that moves them from passive observation to active structural thinking.

Halfway through a unit, you will often find students who can "get the answer" but can’t explain how they got there. This is a sign of procedural mimicry rather than conceptual understanding.

Inserting a scrambled solution here serves as a diagnostic tool. If a student can solve an equation on their own but struggles to put pre-written steps in order, it reveals a gap in their mathematical literacy. They may understand the "do-ing" but not the "why-ing." By stripping away the requirement to calculate, you force them to grapple with the properties (like the Distributive Property or the Equality Properties) that justify each move.

Once students have reached a level of relative fluency, you can insert scrambled solutions as a high-level review activity. To do this, use a "Modified Scramble": provide the correct steps in a jumbled order, but include one or two common error steps (e.g., a step where the student forgot to flip the inequality sign or added instead of subtracted).

This forces students to not only order the logic but to audit the steps. In the teaching process, this moves the student into the role of the "editor." It is much more cognitively demanding to identify why a step is wrong in a sequence than it is to simply follow a memorized procedure.  So when do you use digital vs analog?  In the bell wring, insert a quick 3-card sort in  Desmos at the start of class to reactivate the prior day’s logic. Or use physical strips at a learning station for students who need a tactile break from their Chromebooks. Moving the paper helps solidify the "movement" of the math.

The biggest mistake in using scrambled solutions is waiting until a student is "good at math" to use them. These are not a reward for understanding; they are a scaffold for achieving it. By inserting them right at the moment when a student is beginning to feel overwhelmed by the "blank page," you provide the logical skeleton they need to build their own mathematical confidence.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Scrambled Solution Pt 1

One of the most effective ways to bridge the gap between "watching a teacher" and "doing the work" is a strategy known as Parsons Problems—or more simply, Scrambled Solutions. In this activity, students aren't asked to generate a solution from scratch. Instead, they are given all the correct steps of a solved equation, but the steps are out of order. Their job is to reconstruct the logical sequence from start to finish.

This shift from computation to logical sequencing is a powerful cognitive tool that helps students see math as a narrative rather than a series of disconnected rules.

Scrambled solution activities work because they reduce extraneous cognitive load. For many students, the "blank page" is the biggest hurdle in math. When a student has to worry about arithmetic, handwriting, and algebraic rules all at once, their working memory overflows.

By providing the steps, you remove the fear of "getting the wrong number" and allow the student to focus entirely on the structural logic of the equation. It forces them to ask: "What must happen before I can do this next step?" or "Why does this transformation come after the parentheses are cleared?" This builds a deep mental "schema" of the solving process.

The physical act of moving pieces of paper can be incredibly grounding for students who feel overwhelmed by abstract symbols. Print an equation solved step-by-step in a large font. Cut the steps into strips and place them in an envelope. Students work in pairs to physically arrange the strips on their desks. Include one "distractor" step—a common mistake like a sign error or a wrong operation. Students must identify the correct sequence and explain why the distractor doesn't belong.

Digital tools allow for immediate feedback and "gamification" of the logic process.You can create a "Card Sort" where students drag and drop "cards" containing steps into a vertical column. You can even set it up so the cards change color or "snap" together when placed in the correct sequence.  In addition, you can use  Google Slides or PowerPoint where each step is an individual text box. Students click and drag the boxes into the correct order on the slide.  The biggest advantage here is the "undo" button. Students are more willing to take risks and test a sequence when they can fix it with a single click.

The ultimate goal of a scrambled solution activity is to prepare students for independent problem-solving. This acts as a "scaffold." Once a student has successfully "ordered" three or four equations, their brain has internalized the pattern. They are no longer just memorizing steps; they are understanding the flow of mathematical reasoning.

By moving the focus from finding the answer to ordering the logic, we help students realize that math isn't about magic—it's about a clear, sequential path from the problem to the solution.

Friday, April 10, 2026

Using Graphing Programs Properly

For years, the graphing calculator was the gatekeeper of high school mathematics—a expensive, handheld device with a pixelated screen that students often used more for "button-pushing" than for actual discovery. Today, the landscape has shifted. Browser-based graphing programs like Desmos and GeoGebra have democratized math, turning abstract equations into vibrant, interactive playgrounds.

However, simply putting a laptop in front of a student doesn't guarantee learning. To help students move from "playing with the software" to "exploring the math," educators must use these programs as tools for conjecture and visualization, rather than just answer-checkers.

The true power of modern graphing programs lies in dynamic sliders. In a traditional textbook, a student sees three separate graphs for , and . They are expected to notice a pattern from static images.

In a dynamic program, the student creates a single equation: . By attaching a slider to the variable an and sliding it back and forth, the parabola breathes. It widens, narrows, flips, and flattens. It leads to an "Aha" moment.  The student isn't just told that a affects the vertical stretch; they feel the relationship between the number and the shape. This builds a spatial intuition that rote memorization cannot touch.

Proper use of graphing software starts with a prompt, not a procedure. Instead of saying, "Graph this circle," ask: "What happens to the circle if we change the constant at the end of the equation to a negative number?"  Ask students to predict the outcome on paper first. Then, let them use the program to test their hypothesis. If the graph disappears or does something unexpected, they have an immediate, non-punitive feedback loop to refine their thinking.

Graphing programs are peerless when it comes to teaching systems of inequalities or linear programming. Students can overlay multiple shaded regions to find the "feasible region" of a real-world problem, such as maximizing profit for a small business.  In addition, by dragging the boundary lines, they can see how changing a single constraint (like labor hours or material costs) shifts the entire solution set. This turns a dry algebra problem into a lesson in decision-making and optimization.

Some of the best practices include using sliders to show cause and effect rather than having students use the program to verify a hand-drawn graph.  Consider hiding the equation and ask students to "guess" the rule based on shape.  Avoid providing the equation and asking for a point-by-point plot.  Have students compare multiple graphs using ne screen to see intersections rather than asking students to clear the screen between problems.

Programs like GeoGebra allow for a "dual view" where geometry and algebra live side-by-side. If a student draws a circle and drags a point on its circumference, they can watch the (x,h,k) values in the equation update in real-time. This bridge between the visual and the symbolic is where true mathematical fluency is born. It removes the "mystery" of where the numbers come from.

When used properly, graphing programs act as a cognitive prosthetic. They offload the tedious task of plotting dozens of individual points, freeing the student's brain to focus on high-level patterns, transformations, and relationships.

By framing these programs as "discovery labs" rather than "digital paper," we empower students to treat mathematics not as a list of rules to follow, but as a world of patterns waiting to be explored.  Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear.  Have a great weekend.