Polya's approach centered on three key principles. First, he championed active learning, believing students learn best by discovering solutions themselves rather than being told answers. Second, he emphasized heuristic thinking - the art of guided discovery and learning from experience, viewing problem-solving as a skill that can be developed through practice. Third, he developed sophisticated questioning techniques that guide students toward solutions while encouraging independent thinking.
-
Understand the Problem
- Clearly identify what you're being asked to do
- Gather all available information
- Identify constraints and limitations
- Restate the problem in your own words
- Create visual representations where helpful
- Verify you have sufficient information
-
Devise a Plan
- Search for patterns
- Draw on similar problems you've solved
- Break down complex problems into manageable parts
- Consider working backward from the goal
- Look for ways to simplify the problem
- List possible strategies
- Identify available tools and resources
-
Carry Out the Plan
- Execute your strategy systematically
- Verify each step
- Document your attempts
- Be prepared to start over with a new approach if needed
- Maintain organized records of your process
-
Look Back and Reflect
- Evaluate the reasonableness of your solution
- Verify your results
- Consider alternative approaches
- Extract lessons learned
- Consider broader applications
- Identify potential improvements for future attempts
- Analogy: Find similar problems and patterns, drawing on past experience.
- Decomposition: Break complex problems into smaller, manageable parts.
- Generalization and Specialization: Identify broad principles while testing specific cases.
- Working Backwards: Start from the desired outcome and trace steps backward.
- Auxiliary Elements: Add helpful constructions, diagrams, notation, or intermediate goals.
The book emphasizes several crucial components for effective problem-solving:
- Strategic Questioning: Develop self-dialogue and guide discovery through thoughtful questions
- Positive Mindset: Maintain persistence, embrace learning from failures, and cultivate curiosity
- Effective Teaching: Guide rather than instruct, encourage independence, and build confidence
- Documentation: Keep clear records of thoughts, attempts, and processes