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This problem requires a lot of calculations of surface areas, within a rich problem solving context.
It may be appropriate to draw a ladder on the board, with this on the steps (starting from the bottom):
- calculations going wrong
- no solutions yet
- one solution
- some solutions
- all solutions
- why I am sure I have all the solutions
- I'll change the question to...
Explain to students that wherever they are on the ladder, their goal is to move up to the next step. Circulate round the class and look out for students who are approaching the task systematically.
After students have been working for a little while, bring the class together and ask them for strategies that might help others move up the ladder.
Give them plenty of time to implement these suggestions.
This might be a good lesson in which to allocate five minutes at the end to ask students to reflect on what they have achieved, which methods and ideas were most useful, and what aspects of the problem remain unanswered.
if the height is $1$, what are the possible combinations for the width and depth?
Imagine you are suspending a cube from one vertex and allowing it to hang freely. What shape does the surface of the water make around the cube?
Imagine you have six different colours of paint. You paint a cube using a different colour for each of the six faces. How many different cubes can be painted using the same set of six colours?
In the game of Noughts and Crosses there are 8 distinct winning lines. How many distinct winning lines are there in a game played on a 3 by 3 by 3 board, with 27 cells?