Monthly Archives: March 2018

Emoji Doku Backstory

Edit: These are now called Pixidoku puzzles.  There was already a trademark on the books for Emoji Doku.

(This post is re-posted from my old blog.)

I love these Emoji Doku logic puzzles by Krazydad.  If you like puzzles you should definitely check out his site.  It’s amazing.Emoji Doku

Emoji Dokus are a super fun way to practice logical thinking, but they also gave me my own problem solving challenge.  This last fall I was excited to bring them into my Puzzles & Mindbenders class at Village Home, but there was no obvious way to physically fill in the missing emoji icons to complete the puzzles.  I emailed Krazydad with my question, and he also wasn’t sure.  He suggested using letters to stand for the different emojis, or drawing them in, for those who are artistically inclined. Even though letters are less fun, and drawings take a long time, the learners in my class liked the puzzles and used both these methods.

If you get stuck on a hard puzzle, sometimes it helps to put it aside and come back to it later.  Sometimes something else you’re working on will give you an idea for an approach you hadn’t thought of.  One day, sitting in a coffee shop working on lesson planning, it hit me.  Cardstock tiles.  Duh!  It was one of those ideas that seems so obvious in retrospect.  Isn’t it funny how that happens sometimes?

Needless to say these puzzles are getting even more love in my classes now.  Big bonus – these puzzles turn out to be great for cooperative puzzle solving.  It is natural for the learners to help each other with the tiles, more so than with pencils or dry erase markers.

As you can imagine, these sets are time-consuming to make.  And even after switching to the heavy cardstock of recycled manila folders, I still wish they were sturdier and easier to work with.  So, Krazydad suggested a KickStarter collaboration!  I want to provide classrooms and families with nice cardboard tiles to go with these delightful little puzzles.  I’ll be asking for your help as I get it launched, so stay tuned!  If you might be interested in helping with the Kickstarter or spreading the word, please follow this blog to stay updated, and share this post with your friends and logic-loving communities.

Always Up a Fractal Tree

My nickname as a kid was ‘Monkeyflower’.  I was always up a tree, always looking for “the hard way up” when rock scrambling (usually at Vedawoo, Wyoming), and always up for competition and challenge.  These days I carry forward that spirit of adventure into how I learn, and help others learn math.  Math is best when approached with an adventurous spirit.  There is a deep and mysterious abstract world to uncover, and one beautiful thing about it is that we can all rediscover mathematical truths for ourselves.  We don’t need science labs or expensive equipment.  All we need is our brains, a pencil or a white-board marker, and that sense of adventure.

So join me in my quest to bring Monkeyflower spirit into math learning!