MegaSkills® Activities: Problem Solving

PROBLEM SOLVING
Putting What You Know and
What You Can Do Into Action


The FREE MegaSkills activities in this website collection are drawn from hundreds in the book: MegaSkills®: Building Children's Achievement for the Information Age. Two activities are provided for each MegaSkill ... one for younger students (approximate ages 4-6), one for older students (approximate ages 7-9). For many more activities, purchase the MegaSkills book from your local bookstores or from The Home and School Institute. Check the drop down menu above soon for more MegaSkills Activities.

 

PROBLEM SOLVING
Putting What You Know and
What You Can Do Into Action

Thinking and Choosing - Younger

*Thinking
*Generating Choices for Decision Making

Children can use practice making small decisions before they have to make large ones. You need thinking minds.

Ask your child to pretend the following things are happening:

*You can't find your key and no one is home.
*You get lost on your way to a friend's house.
*You are teased on your way from school.

Ask children to think of as many ways to solve these problems as they can. Don't reject any ideas, even if they sound far-fetched.

After children have mulled over three or four different solutions, let them pick one way that seems best.

For more ideas, try out these scenarios with your children:

*Mother calls you to go on an errand to the neighbor's house next door. But before you start out, a friend comes by and says, "Let's play." What do you do?
*You're in a terrible hurry to get to a costume party, and just as you're putting on that special costume, it rips. What do you do??

Let even young children decide how to arrange their own room or at least part of it, and include your child in the choosing of the decor and furnishings.

Ask for children's ideas to remedy a problem they cause (not necessarily at the time when you're upset about the mess). Examples: Mud on the floor, coats not hung up, milk left out. This way, instead of having a solution imposed on them, children have a hand in making it. - and, we hope, a stake in seeing the solution work.


Decisions Aren't Easy - Older

*Thinking
*Judging Decisions and Consequences

As kids grow older, they need to be aware of the many decisions they make everyday ... about clothes, friends, jobs. You need thinking minds.

Talk with your child about some important decisions you have made in the past. Examples: Buying a car, changing jobs, getting married. Tell about the things you considered before making these decisions. Were you happy with your decisions? Would you make the same ones again?

Making decisions usually involves looking at the pros (the pluses) and the cons (the minuses) of a situation. Together consider the pros and cons of skipping school, eating a lot, spending money. What is gained? What is lost?

Whenever possible, try to let your children bear the consequences of their own decision making - good or bad! Talk about what could be done next time.

Encourage children to become planners: What would they do if they were teachers? Fathers? Mothers? Exchanging roles gives them a glimmer of teachers' and parents' points of view.

Ask for children's advice in choosing the best place for a vacation. Discuss the reasons for their choice and the factors that determine the ultimate decision, such as time and money. Children need to face these realities of life. Providing this practice will help.