Thinking Skills: Critical Thinking and Problem Solving

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112 Unit 3 Problem solving: basic skills


Approximately what proportion of the two
tiles will be needed to cover the whole floor?

A three white to one black
B two white to one black
C equal quantities of both
D two black to one white
E three black to one white

Spatial reasoning involves the use of skills that
are common in the normal lives of people
working in skilled craft areas. Imagine, for
example, the skill used by joiners in cutting roof
joists for an L-shaped building. This is also
necessary for many professionals: the surgeon
needs to be able to visualise the inside of the
body in three dimensions and, of course,
architects use these skills every day of their lives.
Spatial reasoning questions can involve
either two- or three-dimensional tasks, or
relating solid objects to flat drawings.
Thinking in three dimensions is not
something that comes easily to all people, but
undoubtedly practice can improve this ability.
In the simplest sense, a problem-solving
question involving spatial reasoning can
require visualising how an object will look
upside down or in reflection. More
complicated questions might involve relating
a three-dimensional drawing of a building to a
view from a particular direction or the
visualisation of how movement will affect the
view of an object. This chapter is shorter in
terms of description than most of the others
but there are more examples at the end; this is
an area where practice is more important than
theory.
The next example involves a problem-
solving task in two dimensions.

3.9 Spatial reasoning


Commentary
This seems a relatively simple problem, but the
answer is not immediately obvious. This is an
example of a tessellation problem. There are
various ways to go about solving it – one way is
to continue drawing the pattern until you have
enough tiles that you can estimate how many
of each are needed. Another, more rigorous,
method is to identify a unit cell that consists of
a number of each tile, which may be repeated
as a block to cover the whole area. Such a unit
cell for this problem is shown in the drawing.

If you now think carefully, you can imagine
that this block of three tiles could be repeated

The drawing shows part of the tiling pattern
used for a large floor area in a village hall.
This is made up of two tiles, one circular
(shown in black) and one irregular six-sided
tile (shown in white).

Activity

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