How Problem Solving Keeps Advanced Students Challenged

The gap between the most and least prepared students has always been wide in most classrooms. However, during these last two pandemic years, that gap has turned into a chasm. 

Though there are some signs of academic rebounding, we still aren’t at pre-pandemic levels, with NWEA showing math scores still down 5 to 10 percentile points on average and with some cohorts of students declining even further this past year.

This means classrooms will be filled with students at vastly different readiness levels. 

As we look toward “back to school” for fall 2022, teachers continue to have incredibly difficult challenges to keep students at the right level of challenge.

3 Ways to Support Your Advanced Student this Fall 

What can families do with learning gaps exacerbated in the classroom to keep their students challenged, inspired, and engaged – particularly in STEM subjects? Here are some tips for parents of advanced learners. 

1. Say Yes to Subject Mastery — and No to Something Else

Students need to develop a love for excelling in a discipline — whether that’s math, violin, or theater. Expertise for its own sake is arguably the most valuable and transferable skill we can cultivate in students.

First, find out what your child is really interested in. Prompt them to research the companies behind the games or hobbies they love. Look at the people who were involved in building those companies and games. They’ll discover that those people almost always have a problem-solving background in math or science.

Next, find a course, group, or teacher that will help your student dig deeper. Allow them the freedom to uncover and turn things on their head. There’s no telling what they’ll find. And they’ll build critical discovery, communication, and problem-solving skills along the way.

Getting young students into deep problem solving early is critical when they still have the resilience and tolerance for failure. This is how they build adaptability and other problem-solving skills that can be transferred to any type of future challenge. 

Finally, it’s important to remember that helping your student find and grow their expertise will require time and space. To get very good at something, you have to spend time on it — which means they will likely have to say no to something else. 

2. Connect With Like-Minded Instructors and Peers

Connection. That’s certainly something we all could have benefited more from over the last two years. For students, learning in a silo can be difficult and discouraging. As you pursue new social connections for your student, don’t forget about academic connections too.

Find teachers or older students who share the same passions as your child. These are the role models your students see themselves in and are inspired by. They can also become lifelong mentors.

A community of like-minded peers can also be instrumental. Many in-person and online ways to connect your student to those interested in the same subjects. Is there a math club at school (and if not, could you start one)? Are there groups or leagues outside of school? AoPS Academy in-person campuses cultivate local communities of student problem solvers. And the Math Circle Network includes 300 local math communities. 

Online groups can also be easy to connect with, even at a distance. Not only can students turn to each other for support, but they also challenge each other too. Friendly peer competition also serves as its own motivation. You can join the AoPS Online Community — the largest English-speaking math community in the world — for free.

3. Push Against their Knowledge Edge 

To engage is to challenge. If you want to keep your student motivated, you have to keep them pushing up against the frontiers of what they’re capable of.

That was very hard to do during the pandemic. Unless you had a truly outstanding teacher or school program, your student probably dealt with a lot of repetition in their curricula. Repetition begets boredom begets disengagement.

So how do you break through that wall of monotony? By problem-solving! Problem-solving, simply put, means solving problems you’ve never seen before. Problems that force you to lean on fundamental skills like creativity and critical reasoning instead of memory.

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Let’s take math, for example. Advanced math is a great way to introduce students to new, complex, and unconventional challenges. Students develop creative thinking skills by trying multiple approaches to the same problem. Students build up perseverance by spending a lot of time on a single problem. Students hone their communication skills by writing out their solutions and thinking through real-life scenarios. 

This practical skill set keeps students highly engaged and sets them up for academic and professional success. These math skills translate to all subjects: engineering, economics, philosophy, computer science, as well as any situation where you have to take basic ideas and combine them to solve new problems. Not to mention this skill set is completely automation-proof, safeguarding your child’s prospects for those innovations yet to come.

Regardless of the classroom your student will be returning to, try to integrate new problem-solving challenges into your student’s days. Get creative with the questions you ask and scenarios you present by continually challenging your student with problems and situations they’ve never seen before.  

Here are some ways to keep your student challenged:

Here are some additional parent resources that can help: 

Bringing AoPS into Your Student’s Classroom

We get this question a lot, and it’s important: How can you integrate AoPS into your student’s schedule alongside traditional school? Many students use AoPS classes during the school year and over the summer, but they tend to make more progress over the summer since there’s more time. You can see our different options in the image below.

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Here are some ways our families bring “better math” into their traditional classroom:

At Art of Problem Solving (AoPS), students train to become the great problem solvers of tomorrow. Since 1993, AoPS has prepared hundreds of thousands of motivated students in grades 2–12 for college and career success through an engaging curriculum, expert online instruction, and local academies. Through the four programs — Beast Academy, AoPS Online, AoPS Academy, and AoPS Academy Virtual Campus — AoPS offers the world the most comprehensive advanced math pathway. 

Chris Smith, Director of Beast Academy Classroom at Art of Problem Solving

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