Probing Questions

Five types of rich questions for every topic to develop reasoning, communication, and deep mathematical understanding.

The Five Question Types

🧠 Convince me — construct a mathematical argument to show why a statement is true
💡 Give an example — generate examples, boundary cases, and plausible non-examples
⚖️ Always, sometimes, never — decide and justify with examples and reasoning
🔍 Odd one out — identify and argue a case for each option
❌ Explain the mistake — find and explain the error targeting a common misconception

How to Use Probing Questions

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Teachers

Use after students have consolidated the basics, as an extension activity, as an alternative to traditional homework, as a final assessment question, or as a retrieval activity.

Tip: Try “Explain the mistake” as a mini-plenary — it reveals misconceptions instantly.

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Students

Use these probing questions to test and expand your knowledge of key maths topics. Try to answer each one, then compare your answers to mine.

Tip: Don’t just say “sometimes” — always try to find a specific example and a counter-example.

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Parents

Use these probing questions to engage in meaningful, stimulating mathematical discussions with your child — no preparation needed.

Tip: Ask your child to explain their thinking out loud — the conversation matters more than the answer.

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Algebra

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