We’ve all played "Two Truths and a Lie" as an icebreaker. It’s light, it’s engaging, and it secretly forces you to evaluate evidence to spot the deception. But if you port this classic party game into the math classroom, it transforms into an absolute powerhouse of formative assessment.
Instead of passively solving a worksheet, students become mathematical detectives. They have to analyze three statements, justify their reasoning, and pinpoint the exact structural flaw that makes the "lie" untrue.
If you are looking to shake up your warm-ups or review sessions, here is a blueprint for designing high-impact math Two Truths and a Lie activities.
One topic might be found by reverse engineering common misconceptions. The secret to a brilliant math lie isn't making up a random, obviously false number. The best lies are deeply seductive. They are born from the exact misconceptions your students stumble over every single day.
When drafting your lie, think about classic student pitfalls such as forgetting to multiply before adding in the order of operations or confusing integer operations such as (-3)^2 and -3^2 or even swapping the slope (m) and the y-intercept (b) when graphing y = mx + b.
By intentionally building these errors into your lie, you force students to confront and untangle the misconception head-on.
Another way is to diversify the "Truths". If your truths are too straightforward, the lie stands out like a sore thumb. To elevate the rigor, vary the way you present your mathematical truths. Mix up the representations so students have to translate between graphs, tables, symbols, and verbal descriptions.
For a lesson on quadratic functions, your setup might look like this:
Truth 1 (Graphical): The parabola opens downward and has a maximum point at (2,5).
Truth 2 (Algebraic): The vertex form of the function is .
Lie (Numerical/Verbal): The y-intercept of this function is (0,5). (The lie relies on a student confusing the vertex with the y-intercept).
In addition, make it mandatory for students to justify their answers. The magic of this activity doesn’t happen when a student shouts out, "Number three is the lie!" The real magic happens in the defense.
Never let students just guess the lie. Require them to prove why the two truths are mathematically sound, and how to fix the lie so that it becomes a truth. You can structure this using a simple three-column recording sheet:
Try launching your next class with one of these on the board as a low-stakes warm-up. Let students debate in pairs before sharing out. Because there are three distinct entry points, it lowers the barrier to entry for anxious learners while providing a rich launchpad for mathematical discourse.
Once your students get the hang of it, flip the script: have them write the two truths and a lie for their peers. Watching them intentionally craft a clever mathematical lie is the ultimate proof of conceptual mastery.
Have you tried using this strategy in your classroom? What are your favorite mathematical "lies" to throw at your students? Let’s chat in the comments below! Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear.