Probing Questions: Expanding Double Brackets
Probing Questions

Expanding Double Brackets

Questions designed to stretch thinking, reveal misconceptions, and spark mathematical reasoning.

๐Ÿ’ฌ

Convince Me That…

Students must construct a mathematical argument for why each statement is true.

1
Convince me that \( (x + 3)(x + 5) \) is not equal to \( x^2 + 15 \)
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Argument
xยฒ 15 5x 3x x 5 x 3

The expression xยฒ + 15 completely misses the red areas!

Substitution proves this quickly: let \( x = 1 \), then \( (1+3)(1+5) = 24 \), but \( 1^2 + 15 = 16 \).

Visually (see diagram), this error is like calculating the area of the top-left and bottom-right corners but ignoring the other two. The correct expansion includes every combination: \( x^2 + 5x + 3x + 15 = x^2 + 8x + 15 \).

2
Convince me that \( (x + 3)^2 \) is not the same as \( x^2 + 9 \)
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Argument

Try \( x = 2 \): \( (2 + 3)^2 = 25 \), but \( 2^2 + 9 = 13 \). The error comes from “distributing” the square to each term, as though squaring works like doubling. But squaring means multiplying the bracket by itself.

\( (x + 3)^2 = (x + 3)(x + 3) = x^2 + 3x + 3x + 9 = x^2 + 6x + 9 \). You must include the sum of the two cross-multiplications (\( 3x + 3x \)).

3
Convince me that \( (x \; – \; 2)(x \; – \; 7) \) gives a positive constant term
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Argument

The constant term comes from multiplying the two number parts: \( (-2) \times (-7) = +14 \). The key rule is that negative ร— negative = positive.

The full expansion is \( x^2 \; – \; 9x + 14 \). While the middle term (\( -9x \)) is negative because you are adding two negative amounts (\(-2x\) and \(-7x\)), the constant is positive because you are multiplying them.

4
Convince me that \( (2x + 1)(x + 3) \) does not equal \( (x + 1)(2x + 3) \)
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Argument

Expand both. \( (2x + 1)(x + 3) = 2x^2 + 6x + x + 3 = 2x^2 + 7x + 3 \).
And \( (x + 1)(2x + 3) = 2x^2 + 3x + 2x + 3 = 2x^2 + 5x + 3 \).

They share the same \( x^2 \) and constant terms, but the middle terms differ. By swapping the constants (1 and 3) between the brackets, you change which number gets multiplied by \( 2x \) and which gets multiplied by \( x \).

๐ŸŽฏ

Give an Example Of…

Think carefully — the fourth box is a trap! Give a non-example that looks right but isn’t.

1
Give an example of a pair of double brackets that expand to give an expression with no \( x \) term
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Answers

Example: \( (x + 3)(x \; – \; 3) = x^2 \; – \; 9 \)

Another: \( (x + 7)(x \; – \; 7) = x^2 \; – \; 49 \)

Creative: \( (2x + 1)(2x \; – \; 1) = 4x^2 \; – \; 1 \) — this works for non-monics too.

Trap: \( (x + 3)(x \; – \; 4) \) — this gives \( x^2 \; – \; x \; – \; 12 \), which has a \( -x \) term. Just having one \(+\) and one \(-\) isn’t enough; the numbers must be identical (difference of two squares).

2
Give an example of a pair of double brackets that expand to give a negative constant term
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Answers

Example: \( (x + 2)(x \; – \; 5) = x^2 \; – \; 3x \; – \; 10 \)

Another: \( (x \; – \; 1)(x + 4) = x^2 + 3x \; – \; 4 \)

Creative: \( (x \; – \; 7)(x + 1) = x^2 \; – \; 6x \; – \; 7 \) — constant is \( -7 \), equal to one of the original numbers.

Trap: \( (x \; – \; 2)(x \; – \; 5) = x^2 \; – \; 7x + 10 \) — constant is \( +10 \). Students assume two minuses make the answer negative, but for multiplication, negative ร— negative = positive.

3
Give an example of a pair of double brackets that expand to give an expression where the coefficient of \( x \) is 1
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Answers

Example: \( (x + 3)(x \; – \; 2) = x^2 + x \; – \; 6 \) — since \( 3 + (-2) = 1 \).

Another: \( (x + 5)(x \; – \; 4) = x^2 + x \; – \; 20 \)

Creative: \( (2x + 1)(x + 0) = 2x^2 + x \). This also has a coefficient of 1 for x!

Trap: \( (x + 1)(x + 1) = x^2 + 2x + 1 \) — coefficient of x is 2. Students often confuse the number 1 in the bracket with the resulting coefficient.

4 โœฆ
Give an example of a pair of double brackets where one bracket has a coefficient of \( x \) greater than 1, and the expansion has all positive terms
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
๐Ÿ’ก Possible Answers

Example: \( (2x + 1)(x + 2) = 2x^2 + 5x + 2 \)

Another: \( (3x + 1)(x + 1) = 3x^2 + 4x + 1 \)

Creative: \( (100x + 1)(x + 1) = 100x^2 + 101x + 1 \) — extreme coefficients.

Trap: \( (2x + 3)(x \; – \; 1) \) — having positive x terms isn’t enough; the constant must be positive too, which requires both number parts to have the same sign.

โš–๏ธ

Always, Sometimes, Never

Is the statement always true, sometimes true, or never true? Students should justify their decision with examples.

1
When you expand \( (x + a)(x + b) \), the coefficient of \( x \) equals \( a + b \)
ALWAYS

This is always true for this specific form. Expanding gives: \( x^2 + (a+b)x + ab \).

Note for deeper thinking: This rule breaks immediately if the coefficient of \( x \) is not 1. For example, in \( (2x+1)(x+3) \), the middle term is \( 7x \), not \( (1+3)x \). The “sum of constants” rule is a special case for monic quadratics only.

2
Expanding two brackets of the form \( (x + a)(x + b) \) gives exactly 3 terms in the final answer
SOMETIMES

Usually true. \( (x + 1)(x + 2) = x^2 + 3x + 2 \) (3 terms).

FALSE case: When \( a = -b \), the middle terms cancel out. \( (x + 4)(x \; – \; 4) = x^2 \; – \; 16 \) (only 2 terms). This is the difference of two squares.

3
When you expand \( (x + a)(x + b) \) where \( a \) and \( b \) are both negative, all the terms in the expansion are negative
NEVER

The \( x^2 \) term is always positive. The constant term is \( a \times b \), and since negative ร— negative = positive, the constant is also positive. Only the middle term is negative.

Example: \( (x \; – \; 2)(x \; – \; 3) = x^2 \; – \; 5x + 6 \). Two of the three terms are positive!

4
The expansion of \( (x + a)(x + b) \) will always contain an \( x^2 \) term, an \( x \) term, and a constant term
SOMETIMES

TRUE case: \( (x + 2)(x + 3) = x^2 + 5x + 6 \) — all present.

FALSE case 1: \( (x + 2)(x \; – \; 2) = x^2 \; – \; 4 \) — no \( x \) term.

FALSE case 2: \( x(x + 5) = x^2 + 5x \) — if we allow \( a=0 \), there is no constant term.

๐Ÿ”ด

Odd One Out

Which is the odd one out? Can you make a case for each one? There’s no single right answer!

1
Which is the odd one out?
\( (x + 2)(x + 5) \)
\( (x + 4)(x \; – \; 4) \)
\( (x \; – \; 3)(x \; – \; 5) \)
๐Ÿ’ก A Case for Each
\( (x + 2)(x + 5) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one whose expansion has all positive terms. The others both contain subtraction signs.
\( (x + 4)(x \; – \; 4) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one with no \( x \) term (it expands to \( x^2 \; – \; 16 \)).
\( (x \; – \; 3)(x \; – \; 5) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one with a negative middle term (\( -8x \)). The others are \( +7x \) and \( 0x \).
2
Which is the odd one out?
\( (x + 1)^2 \)
\( (x + 6)(x \; – \; 6) \)
\( (2x + 3)(x + 4) \)
๐Ÿ’ก A Case for Each
\( (x + 1)^2 \) is the odd one out — it’s the only perfect square (both brackets are identical).
\( (x + 6)(x \; – \; 6) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one that expands to exactly two terms (\( x^2 \; – \; 36 \)).
\( (2x + 3)(x + 4) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only non-monic quadratic (coefficient of \( x^2 \) is 2).
3
Which is the odd one out?
\( (x + 2)^2 \)
\( (x \; – \; 5)(x + 2) \)
\( x(x + 7) \)
๐Ÿ’ก A Case for Each
\( (x + 2)^2 \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one with all positive terms.
\( (x \; – \; 5)(x + 2) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one with a negative constant term (\( -10 \)).
\( x(x + 7) \) is the odd one out — it’s the only one with no constant term.
๐Ÿ”

Explain the Mistake

Each example contains a deliberate error targeting a common misconception. Can you find where and why the reasoning goes wrong?

1
Expand \( (x + 4)(x + 3) \)
A student writes:

Answer: \( x^2 + 12 \)

Reasoning: “I multiplied x by x to get xยฒ, then 4 times 3 to get 12.”

๐Ÿ” The Mistake

The student only multiplied the “matching” pairs (firsts and lasts). They missed the two cross-multiplications: \( x \times 3 = 3x \) and \( 4 \times x = 4x \). The correct expansion requires every term in the first bracket to multiply every term in the second.

Correct answer: \( x^2 + 7x + 12 \).

2
Expand \( (x + 4)^2 \)
A student writes:

Answer: \( x^2 + 8x + 16 \) โœ“

Reasoning: “x squared is xยฒ, then you just double the 4 to get 8x, and 4 squared is 16.”

๐Ÿ” The Mistake

This “double the number” shortcut is dangerous. It only works for simple cases like \( (x+a)^2 \). It fails immediately if there is a coefficient in front of x.

For example, if the student tries to “double the 4” for \( (2x + 4)^2 \), they would get \( 4x^2 + 8x + 16 \). But the actual middle term is \( 16x \) (from \( 8x + 8x \)). The middle term comes from summing the cross-products, not just doubling the constant.

3
Expand \( (x \; – \; 4)(x + 3) \)
A student writes:

Answer: \( x^2 \; – \; x + 12 \)

Reasoning: “x times x is xยฒ. Then โˆ’4 plus 3 is โˆ’1, so that’s โˆ’x. And 4 times 3 is 12.”

๐Ÿ” The Mistake

The student made a sign error on the constant term. They treated the multiplication as \( 4 \times 3 \), ignoring the negative sign on the 4.

The constant comes from \( (-4) \times (+3) = -12 \).
Correct answer: \( x^2 \; – \; x \; – \; 12 \).

4
Expand \( (x + 5)(x + 2) \)
A student writes:

Answer: \( 9x + 10 \)

Reasoning: “x and x is 2x, then x times 2 is 2x and 5 times x is 5x, so that’s 2x + 5x + 2x is 9x. Then 5 times 2 is 10.”

๐Ÿ” The Mistake

The student thinks \( x \times x = 2x \). This confuses multiplication with addition. \( x \times x = x^2 \).

Expanding double brackets with \( x \) terms in both must produce a quadratic (highest power is \( x^2 \)). If there is no \( x^2 \), the first multiplication step is wrong.