Problem Solving
Problem Solving
As a student you are likely to be involved with a wide range of activities on campus, at work, in your home and with your friends. At times during these activities challenges or problems will arise. Often you would resolve these automatically, however sometimes you may experience a significant problem which you find difficult to solve as quickly or as automatically as you may under other circumstances. The aim of this resource is to assist you to develop the skills you need to become an effective problem solver when facing challenging or difficult situations.
How is this problem affecting me? How is it affecting others? Who else experiences this problem? What do they do about it?
Seeing the problem in different ways is likely to help you find an effective solution.
Improve your health? Increase your time management skills? Complete the assignments to the best of your ability? Finish the assignments as soon as possible?
If you decide your goal is to improve your health, that will lead to different solutions to those linked with the goal of completing your assignments as soon as possible. One goal may lead you to a doctor and another may lead you to apply for extensions for your assignments. So working out your goals is a vital part of the problem solving process.
Step 7. Evaluate
Just because you have implemented the best possible solution, you may not have automatically solved your problem, so evaluating the effectiveness of your solution is very important. You can ask yourself (and others) :
How effective was that solution? Did it achieve what I wanted? What consequences did it have on my situation?
If the solution was successful in helping you solve your problem and reach your goal, then you know that you have effectively solved your problem. If you feel dissatisfied with the result, then you can begin the steps again.