Libby Jared chose this problem for the
NRICH Tenth Anniversary celebration and this is what she had to
say about it: "I chose this problem for many more reasons than I
could write in one sentence on the summary page.
Firstly I saw it being made up by Toni
(Beardon) as she sat at a computer at Szechenyi Istvan Primary
School, in Tiszaujvaros, a town in Hungary. We were there (in May
2000) as part of EuroMaths, a small EU project which linked
schools in Denmark, England and Hungary. The schools used nine
NRICH problems over three years, during which time the teachers
involved discussed with one another their thoughts and different
practices in using such problems in their classrooms. Several
friendships were forged between us.
But pleasant memories would be
insufficient if Group Photo was not the good mathematics problem
that it undoubtedly is. To begin with, it can it be simplified by
reducing the number of people to be in the photograph. This makes
it accessible to primary school pupils and I know that some
classes have had great fun in working it out using real people.
Also, I like the investigative nature that the problem presents
and it does eventually (I believe) require a systematic
approach.
Our Hungarian colleagues provided two
different tree diagrams to show the possibilities, whilst others
in England worked with numbers set out in two lines. However,
some people jump to conclusions a little too early, for just when
it looks as if a pattern of results is emerging, something
happens to contradict the spotted, but wrongly predicted,
result.
I have been reliably informed that
Professor Alan Beardon has used it with his post graduate
students in his Problem Solving course in South Africa. I too
present the problem each year to my post graduate trainee
mathematics teachers who work enthusiastically to solve it - well
at least to their satisfaction. Hopefully many of them will take
Group Photo into their classrooms and introduce another
generation to the problem.
If you would like to read how one primary
school worked on the problem then you will find an article in the
Mathematics Teaching number 188 (published by the Association of
Teachers of Mathematics).The title of the article - for a reason
which you may need to investigate for yourselves - is 'The answer
is 42'."
More Notes: This 'people'
problem gets small groups physically involved in learning by
action (kinaesthetic learning) and it is very suitable for upper
primary as well as for older students. Get four people of
different heights to arrange themselves for the photo. How many
ways can they do it?
What about two people? Then the class can try the problem in
groups of six people. There will be a lot of discussion about the
ways of recording the different arrangements and checking that
they have found them all.
Having found the number of arrangements for 2, 4, 6 and 8 people
there is an 'obvious' pattern that suggests the number of
arrangments for 10 people, but then counting the possibilities
leads to a surprise.
This problem only asks you to find the number of arrangements for
taking a photo of ten people and that is usually where it stops
with younger students.
There is an obvious generalisation to taking a photo of 12, 14,
.... and then of any even number of people. To identify and find
a formula for the sequence that arises is challenging for
students in the last couple of years of schooling.