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

M, M and M

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

Why do this problem?

This problem offers the students an opportunity to consolidate what they are expected to know about mean, mode and median whilst also challenging them to work systematically, and justify their reasoning.

Possible approach

A variation of this problem featured in an NRICH Secondary webinar in October 2020.

Start by writing five numbers on the board: 5, 3, 6, 3, 3 and ask for the mean, median and mode of this set. Resolve any disagreements.
"You know how to answer questions like this, but what if I turn the question round? What if I had told you that the mean, mode and median of five positive whole numbers had a mean of 4, a mode of 3 and a median of 3? Would you have been able to tell me the five numbers?"

"Are there any other sets of five numbers that fit these conditions? Can you find them all?"

Allow some time for students to work on the problem on their own, before inviting them to work with a partner.
Circulate around the class. Observe which students are working randomly and which are working more systematically.

Prompt students who are working randomly to consider breaking up the problem into smaller parts:
"What if one of the numbers was 1? What if you had no 1s? ”¦"
Or: "Can you have just one 3? What about two 3s? Three 3s? ”¦"

When appropriate ask each pair:
"Can you convince yourselves you have found all the solutions?"
"Do you think you could convince the rest of the class?"
Students who find it difficult to work systematically could record each solution on a separate slip of paper and then arrange them into groups.

It would be useful to give students some time to rewrite their set of solutions in a way that makes it easy to convince others that they haven't missed any possibilities.

Invite some pairs to list their set on the board, or on a large sheet of paper, in a way that makes it clear that all the possibilities are included.

If you end up with several different orderings, you could:
  •  invite each pair to explain their logic to the class
  •  invite the class to work out what the reasoning is behind each ordering
  •  ask students to just list the first few sets of numbers and ask the class to predict which sets will follow.

Finish the activity by asking the students to make up a similar question including mean, mode, median and range, for their partner. Can they find a question which has a unique solution?

Key questions

Which piece of information is the most useful to start with?
How can you organise your work so you can be confident that you will have found all the results by the end?

Possible support

Students who find it difficult to work systematically may be helped by recording each solution on a separate slip of paper and rearranging them into 'families'. If you are using an interactive white board you could model this by recording solutions as they are produced and rearranging them.

Possible extension

Unequal Averages follows on from this problem.
 

Related Collections

  • Finding all solutions (Teacher)
  • Finding all solutions (Teacher)
  • Finding all solutions
  • Working Systematically - Lower Secondary

You may also like

Bat Wings

Two students collected some data on the wingspan of bats, but each lost a measurement. Can you find the missing information?

Kate's Date

When Kate ate a giant date, the average weight of the dates decreased. What was the weight of the date that Kate ate?

Balancing the Books

How many visitors does a tourist attraction need next week in order to break even?

  • 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