Four-Step in Problem Solving Process
Four-Step in Problem Solving Process
George Polya described the experience of problem solving in his book, How to
Solve It, p. v:
A great discovery solves a great problem but there is a grain of discovery in the solution of any
problem. Your problem may be modest; but if it challenges your curiosity and brings into play
your inventive facilities, and if you solve it by your own means, you may experience the tension
and enjoy the triumph of discovery.
As part of his work on problem solving, Polya developed a four-step problem-solving process similar to
the following:
• Devising a Plan
The following list of strategies, although not exhaustive, is very useful:
1. Look for a pattern.
2. Examine related problems and determine if the same technique can be applied.
3. Examine a simpler or special case of the problem to gain insight into the solution of the
original problem.
4. Make a table.
5. Make a diagram.
6. Write an equation.
7. Use a guess and check.
8. Work backward.
9. Identify a subgoal.
• Looking Back
1. Check the results in the original problem. In some cases, this will require a proof.
2. Interpret the solution in terms of the original problem. boes your answer make sense? Is
it reasonable?
3. Determine whether there is another method of finding the solution.
4. If possible, determine other related or more general problems for which the techniques
will work.
These and other general mathematics problem-solving strategies, or rules of thumb for successful problem
solving, are called heuristics.