Skip over navigation
Cambridge University Faculty of Mathematics NRich logo
menu search
  • Teachers expand_more
    • Early years
    • Primary
    • Secondary
    • Post-16
    • Events
    • Professional development
  • Students expand_more
    • Primary
    • Secondary
    • Post-16
  • Parents expand_more
    • Early Years
    • Primary
    • Secondary
    • Post-16
  • Problem-Solving Schools
  • About NRICH expand_more
    • About us
    • Impact stories
    • Support us
    • Our funders
    • Contact us
  • search

Or search by topic

Number and algebra

  • The Number System and Place Value
  • Calculations and Numerical Methods
  • Fractions, Decimals, Percentages, Ratio and Proportion
  • Properties of Numbers
  • Patterns, Sequences and Structure
  • Algebraic expressions, equations and formulae
  • Coordinates, Functions and Graphs

Geometry and measure

  • Angles, Polygons, and Geometrical Proof
  • 3D Geometry, Shape and Space
  • Measuring and calculating with units
  • Transformations and constructions
  • Pythagoras and Trigonometry
  • Vectors and Matrices

Probability and statistics

  • Handling, Processing and Representing Data
  • Probability

Working mathematically

  • Thinking mathematically
  • Developing positive attitudes
  • Cross-curricular contexts

Advanced mathematics

  • Decision Mathematics and Combinatorics
  • Advanced Probability and Statistics
  • Mechanics
  • Calculus

For younger learners

  • Early Years Foundation Stage

Cuboids

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow starYellow star
Secondary curriculum
  • Problem
  • Getting Started
  • Student Solutions
  • Teachers' Resources

 

Why do this problem?

This problem requires a lot of calculations of surface areas, within a rich problem solving context.
 

Possible approach


This printable worksheet may be useful: Cuboids.

Work with a specific cuboid, eg $2 \times 3 \times 5$, or a breakfast cereal box, to establish how to calculate surface area of cuboids. Students could practise working out surface area mentally on some small cuboids made of multilink cubes.

 

Present the problem, ask students to keep a record of things that they tried that didn't work (and what was wrong) as well as things that did work. In this initial working session, try to ensure that students are calculating surface area correctly. This spreadsheet may be useful (for teachers' eyes only!).


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.

 

Key questions

  • Have you found none/one/some or all of the solutions
  • Is there a cube that will work?
  • How might you organise a systematic search for the cuboids with surface area $100$?

Possible support


Suggest students approach the task systematically:

if the height is $1$, what are the possible combinations for the width and depth?

if the height is $2, 3, 4$... what are the possible combinations for the width and depth?

In groups, or as a class, keep a record of all cuboids whose surface areas have been calculated.
Award ten points for a bulls eye "$100$", five points for each $95-105$, and two points for $90-110$.
Any miscalculated results could lose points, providing motivation for peer checking, and helping each other.


Possible extension


The main extension activity could focus on the convincing argument that all solutions have been found. Once this has been answered, you might like to consider these extensions:
  • Express the method for calculating surface area, algebraically.
  • Which surface area values will generate lots of cuboids, and which give none or just one?
  • Could you set up a spreadsheet to help with the calculations?

 

A sheet showing a net of a cuboid, like this , may help students to organise their working and ideas.

 

 

 

Related Collections

  • Working Systematically - Lower Secondary

You may also like

All in the Mind

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?

Painting Cubes

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?

Tic Tac Toe

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?

  • Tech help
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Sign up to our newsletter
  • Twitter X logo

The NRICH Project aims to enrich the mathematical experiences of all learners. To support this aim, members of the NRICH team work in a wide range of capacities, including providing professional development for teachers wishing to embed rich mathematical tasks into everyday classroom practice.

NRICH is part of the family of activities in the Millennium Mathematics Project.

University of Cambridge logo NRICH logo