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Health Quests
Overview
In this activity, students working in small groups visit several
Web sites that feature various brainteasers, riddles, word
problems, number problems, and picture problems. Groups use
their own critical thinking and creative problem-solving abilities
to generalize about the nature of the on-line puzzles and,
finally, to create a puzzle of their own.
Objectives
- To solve an assortment of puzzles featured
on the World Wide Web in order to understand the role of
critical and creative thinking in the pursuit of good mental
health.
- To use critical thinking and creative
problem-solving skills to understand important logic concepts
and to create an original puzzle or conundrum.
Getting Started
Bring to class an assortment of puzzle booklets, including
crosswords, logic puzzles, and brainteasers. As an alternative,
you might write the phrase Puzzles and Games on the chalkboard,
explaining to students that this phrase represents the hub
of a word web and that they are to brainstorm items that flesh
out the web. Ask what the puzzles have in common, eliciting
that all make use of powers of thought and problem-solving
skills. Remind students that the ability to seek creative
solutions and think through problems helps develop good mental
health and mental capacity.
Introduce the activity by explaining that
students are to work in groups to solve a number of on-line
brainteasers. Stress that these activities are not intelligence
tests. Encourage groups to work cooperatively and patiently
to seek solutions to as many items within a given puzzle as
they can. In the interest of time and depending on your class
size, you may want to instruct groups to limit themselves
to 15 minutes per puzzle.
Classroom Follow-up
Allow time for groups to attempt to solve each other's puzzles,
perhaps first asking the class as a whole to develop an assessment
form to be completed for each puzzle indicating, for example,
the puzzle type (left- or right-brain). If your school or
class has its own Web site and there are students in the class
with HTML scripting skills, you may want to ask volunteers
to produce a puzzle page featuring some or all of the mind
puzzles that groups developed for the activity. Other members
of the faculty and student body should be alerted to the presence
of this new page and encouraged to visit it.
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