The Mathematical Association of Western Australia

The Mathematical Association of Western Australia The Mathematical Association of WA (MAWA), est. 1958, is a not-for-profit organisation that offers mathematical support to educators, students and families.

Our aim is to provide leadership for improving the quality of mathematics education across Western Australia. MAWA acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land where we work and live. We pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging.

26/06/2026

🚨 FINAL CALL! 🚨

Are you a pre-service or early career teacher looking to build your confidence in STEM? This is your last chance to secure your place at STAWA's FREE Early Career & Pre-Service Teachers STEM Conference! 🎉

Join us for a full day of hands-on workshops, practical classroom strategies, inspiring keynote speakers, networking opportunities, mentor teachers, STEM organisations, and classroom-ready resources—all designed to support you at the beginning of your teaching journey. Plus, it's fully catered! 🍽️

📅 Tuesday 21 July

📍 Scitech

🎟️ FREE (but places are limited!)

Don't miss this opportunity to connect with fellow educators, discover new teaching ideas, and leave feeling confident and inspired for the classroom. Register now before registrations close!

👉 Register here: https://www.stawa.net/conferences/early-careers-preservice-teachers-stem-conference/

At MAWA, we believe mathematics is about more than getting the right answer — it’s about curiosity, reasoning and making...
26/06/2026

At MAWA, we believe mathematics is about more than getting the right answer — it’s about curiosity, reasoning and making sense of the world.

Maths Talent Quest gives students the chance to investigate meaningful questions, communicate their thinking and experience mathematics as a powerful tool for exploration.

From Kindy to Year 12, there’s a place for every young mathematician in MTQ.

📅 Registrations close 31 July, so now is the perfect time to get your students involved.
https://mawainc.org.au/maths-talent-quest/

We can’t wait to see what your students discover.

Maths + fun + freebies? Yes please! 🎉There’s still time to register for the Maths Expo!Come along for an exciting day of...
26/06/2026

Maths + fun + freebies? Yes please! 🎉

There’s still time to register for the Maths Expo!

Come along for an exciting day of mathematical exploration, and your registration includes:
✨ Entry to the Expo
🎁 A showbag
🎤 A live maths show

Whether you love puzzles, problem-solving or discovering something new, there’s something for everyone.

Register now before spots fill!
https://mawainc.org.au/maths-expo/

26/06/2026

This PL looks absolutely amazing and with presenters like these you will not be disappointed!

23/06/2026
22/06/2026

GEORGE POLYA: FATHER OF PROBLEM SOLVING IN MATHEMATICS EDUCATION ♥️❤️🌹

A Stanford mathematician spent 40 years watching brilliant students freeze in front of hard problems.

Not because they lacked intelligence Because nobody had ever taught them what to do before they started solving.

His name is George Pólya, and the book he wrote in 1945 has never gone out of print It has sold over a million copies Marvin Minsky, the man who built the first neural network machine at MIT, said publicly that everyone should know this work Engineers, mathematicians, and computer scientists treat it as scripture.

Most people have never heard of it.

Here is the framework buried inside it that changed how I think about every hard problem I face.

Pólya watched the same failure repeat itself across decades of students A problem would be presented The student would stare at it for a moment, feel the first wave of anxiety, and immediately start calculating Not because calculating was the right next step Because calculating felt like doing something, and doing something felt better than sitting with the discomfort of not knowing what to do.

The calculation was almost always wrong Not because the student lacked the skill to execute it. Because they had not yet understood what they were being asked.

Pólya called this the most neglected step in all of problem solving, and he spent the rest of his career trying to make people take it seriously.

Step one is to understand the problem Not skim it. Not assume you know what it is asking because you have seen something similar before Understand it Completely He gave students a specific set of questions to force this: What is the unknown?

What are the given conditions? Can you draw a figure? Can you restate the problem in your own words without looking at it?

That last one is the filter. If you cannot restate a problem in your own words, you do not understand it. You have only read it.

Most people skip this entirely and wonder why they get stuck.

Step two is to make a plan Not to execute To plan. Pólya documented every heuristic he could observe in successful problem solvers, and one pattern appeared more than any other. When a problem feels impossible, find a simpler version of it and solve that first.

Not because the simpler version is the goal. Because solving it gives you a foothold, a method, a partial structure you can carry back to the original problem and build from.

He phrased it with precision: if you cannot solve the proposed problem, try first to solve some related problem Could you imagine a more accessible related problem?

That question alone is worth more than most problem-solving courses.

Step three is to carry out the plan This is the step everyone thinks is the whole game. It is not. It is the third of four And Pólya spent the least time on it because it is the most obvious. Once you understand the problem and have a plan, ex*****on is mostly patience.

Step four is the one almost nobody does Look back. Not to check the arithmetic To ask a different set of questions entirely Can you verify the result by a different method? Can you use this result or this method to solve a different problem? What would you do differently next time?

This is where the real learning lives and almost no one goes there.

The look-back step is not about the problem you just solved It is about building a library of methods that transfers to the next problem, and the one after that. Every expert problem solver Pólya studied had this habit Every struggling student skipped directly from the answer to the next question on the page, carrying nothing forward, starting from zero every time.

Pólya's deepest insight was not a technique.
It was a diagnosis.

The reason most intelligent people feel bad at problem solving is not that they lack the ability to reason It is that they conflate understanding a problem with having read it They conflate having a method with starting to work They conflate getting an answer with having learned anything.

These are not the same things They never were.

The students who get genuinely good at hard problems are not the ones who practice more. They are the ones who slow down at the beginning and the end, at the two moments every instinct tells them to rush.

The problem is almost always not as hard as it looks at the start.

You just haven't understood it yet.

Do you have a child who loves mathematics? 🔢✨The National Maths Summer School is a remarkable opportunity for students w...
21/06/2026

Do you have a child who loves mathematics? 🔢✨

The National Maths Summer School is a remarkable opportunity for students with a passion for mathematics to spend time learning, exploring and problem-solving with other mathematically talented students from across Australia.

More than just a summer program, it's a chance for young people to build confidence, make lifelong friendships and discover where their interest in mathematics could take them.

If your child is always asking questions, enjoys tackling challenging problems, or simply lights up when talking about maths, this could be the perfect opportunity for them.

📅 Applications are now open.
🔗 Visit the National Maths Summer School website to learn more about eligibility and the application process.

Please share this post with families who might know a budding mathematician ready for their next adventure.

📣 **Registrations are now open for the 2026 Maths Talent Quest – but don't leave it too late!**The **Maths Talent Quest ...
21/06/2026

📣 **Registrations are now open for the 2026 Maths Talent Quest – but don't leave it too late!**

The **Maths Talent Quest (MTQ)** invites students from **Kindy to Year 12** to investigate, explore and celebrate mathematics in creative and meaningful ways. From uncovering patterns and solving real-world problems to analysing data and designing innovative solutions, MTQ encourages students to think deeply and showcase their mathematical talents.

🏆 Students can enter as individuals, in groups or as a whole class, with opportunities to receive State recognition and represent Western Australia at the **National Maths Talent Quest**.

📅 **Registrations close Friday 31 July.**

Give your students the chance to discover that mathematics is about curiosity, creativity and problem-solving.

🔗 Learn more and register: https://mawainc.org.au/maths-talent-quest/

20/06/2026

"I'm too pretty to do math" - on sale right now at MYER by Australian brand Lioness.

See what our CEO, Allan Dougan had to say about it in yesterday's The Sydney Morning Herald, Brisbane Times and other papers.

This is the kind of message that tells girls their appearance and their intellect are in competition. They are not!!

Share if you agree.



https://www.smh.com.au/national/girls-being-told-they-re-too-pretty-to-do-math-is-degrading-20260616-p607b4.html?utm_source=smh-web&utm_medium=share_article&utm_campaign=national&utm_content=subscriber+alldigital&utm_term=product_feature

Address

12 Cobbler Place
Perth, WA
6061

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 8am - 4pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Mathematical Association of Western Australia posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share