Why do this problem?

This is an engaging problem that challenges students to work in 3 dimensions and to use different representations of the cube. It can be used to encourage students to persevere, collaborate, work systematically and reason logically.

Possible approach

Introduce the task by challenging the students to create an anti-rubik's cube.
Offer them multilink cubes (plastic coloured cubes that fix together), pencil and paper and the computer interactivity so that they have a choice of ways in which to approach the problem.

Let students pursue their own attempts to orientate themselves within this context, but attention may be drawn, at well-judged moments, to the number of faces that cubes in individual positions will have 'visible'.

Key questions

Possible extension

If students have chosen how to solve the problem from a range of possibilities (ie. multilink cubes, pencil and paper or the computer interactivity) challenge them to solve the puzzle again from scratch using a different approach.

Possible support

Students could attempt Painted Cube before trying this problem.
 
 
Handouts for teachers are available here (word document, pdf document), with the problem on one side and the notes on the other.