FPS Book 1 October 2013 | Page 12

Working in a team of four for those few intensive hours really pushed us to work on our teamwork and creativity skills. I can remember bouncing ideas off each other in the brainstorming and laughing at the amazing (and sometimes ridiculous) ideas we came up with together. Elisabeth Kramer National Finalist 1995, Class of 1999 2005: Kate and Mary have fun with Plane Captain in USA STEP 3: SOLUTIONS About a Solution: A solution must solve the key verb phrase, not the purpose, not the other challenges and not the topic. GIPS problem Solvers must remember that the Future Scene is written about a future time and their solutions need to reflect that. Even if the basic idea is not new, teams can use futuristic details on how the solution can work. Each solution must be elaborated with details about who will do something, how the ideas will work and what will be accomplished. A solution will be a positive statement. What makes Step 3 challenging? Too often students address their purpose but ignore their key verb phrase. They often forget they have to explain fully why the solution will work. Repeating the purpose is not an explanation. Some solutions that students write are very good solutions to a slightly different problem instead of the one they have chosen so they do not count. 11