Productive failure prompts students to tackle problems before direct instruction, fostering deeper learning. Here’s the how and why.
Productive Failure: Leveraging Students’ Ideas, Making the Learning Process Productive
How Can Productive Failure Help Your Students?- Helps students learn and better understand complex math problems
- Improves teachers’ understanding of how students learn and what students know
- Allows teachers to catch students’ misconceptions and connect students’ prior knowledge to new concepts
Regardless of ability level, students will develop critical knowledge and skills, learn to persist amidst challenges, and hone their collaboration skills.
Why Productive Failure?
Productive Failure allows students to generate and explore their own solutions to new and complex math problems before actually being taught the “correct” solution. They may not get the “right” answer at first, but this floundering can pave the way for deeper learning.
Through a JC Mathematics package that covers key topics in Statistics, the Productive Failure research project provides a professional development program that engages teachers in designing, unpacking and building learning and problem solving skills in JC students.
How Does Productive Failure Work?
- Productive failure flips the commonly-held assumption that students are unable to solve complex questions unless a teacher scaffolds and demonstrates how it is done.
- The Productive Failure design taps on 4 interdependent core mechanisms:
How Did Students Respond?
How Can Teachers Get Started?

Remember!
- Mind the hand-holding! Productive failure is not about getting the right answer right away. Allow and encourage your students to question, explain and elaborate on their solutions.
- Stretch your students! Try setting complex math questions that will leverage students’ formal and intuitive prior knowledge.
- Lead the consolidation! As the subject expert, you will be able to understand and explain the critical features, and help students put together and link their solutions to the targeted concepts.
Related Links
- ReEd Vol 2 2011, pg 3 “Productive Failure in Math” [PDF]
- ReEd Vol 14 2014, pg 3 “Designing for a Collaborative Future”[PDF]
Research Projects
The following projects are associated with Productive Failure Research:
Research Team
To learn more about Productive Failure, please contact the Principal Investigator A/P Lee Ngan Hoe at nganhoe.lee@nie.edu.sg.
Principal Investigator
Co-Principal Investigators
Collaborators
Acknowledgments
This research on Productive Failure was funded by Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE) under the Education Research Funding Programme (DEV 03/14 MK) and administered by National Institute of Education (NIE), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Singapore MOE and NIE.
This knowledge resource was written by Bernadine W. Sengalrayan in June 2017, updated by Ms Monica Lim on 4 January 2022.