FPS Book 1 October 2013 | Page 14

FPS teaches you not to be blinded by one aspect of an issue but rather to see it as a whole and prioritise accordingly. Alyssa Robinson IC GIPS 2005 and 2006 Class of Class of 2007 A fantastic way to get to know like-minded people and to think outside the syllabus. Jessica Drayton IC GIPS team, 2nd National Middle CmPS team 2005, of 2010 IC 2009 Class Principal Barbara Watkins  shows a CmPS Project              to the school  STEP 4: CRITERIA About Criteria: Criteria are characteristics by which solutions will be judged and are written as questions. Each criterion can have only one dimension and must express the desired direction. Each will be written with a superlative word such as best, most, or easiest so the solutions can be ranked. There are different qualities of criteria. A generic or stock criterion is not as significant as a clearly written, targeted one. Criteria should help students find the idea with the most potential for solving a problem. What makes Step 4 challenging? Students often find it difficult to write clearly targeted criteria and they resort to stock ideas. To achieve a targeted criterion, a problem solver must look carefully at a key verb phrase and purpose of the underlying problem and at the scenario itself. If the criterion as it is written could apply to any problem then it is clearly a stock or generic one and it won’t score well. 13