Let’s talk about math projects for a second.
If you’ve ever planned one, you probably had high hopes.
You were excited.
Your students seemed excited.
It looked engaging on paper.
And then… it flopped.
Students were confused.
Some didn’t take it seriously.
The math got lost.
Or the whole thing just felt chaotic.
And you walked away thinking:
“Yeah… I don’t have time for that.”
But here’s the truth:
The problem isn’t math projects.
The problem is how most math projects are designed.
Why So Many Math Projects Fall Flat
A lot of math projects start with good intentions.
“Create a poster…”
“Design a roller coaster…”
“Make a presentation…”
They sound engaging.
But when you watch students actually work through them, you start to notice something:
- Some students are doing the math
- Some are focused on design
- Some are completely lost
And the math?
It becomes optional.
That’s where things break down.
Because if the math isn’t the focus, the learning won’t be either.
The Mistake Most Teachers Don’t Realize They’re Making
Here’s what’s happening behind the scenes:
Most math projects prioritize the product over the thinking.
Students are trying to:
- make it look good
- finish quickly
- check the boxes
Instead of:
- reasoning
- analyzing
- making sense of the math
So even though the project looks engaging…
It’s not actually effective.
A Real Classroom Example (And What Changed)
I’ve been there too.
One of my biggest “this should have worked” moments was a lesson I call my Laser Maze project.
On paper, it had everything:
- hands-on materials
- collaboration
- a creative task involving angles and reflections
It should have been a win.
But when I actually taught it?
It was chaos.
Students were playing with materials.
Groups were off track.
Some were rushing to finish.
And the math?
Barely there.
That moment forced me to rethink everything I thought I knew about designing math projects.
The Shift That Changed Everything
The next time I designed a similar experience, I did something different.
I stopped focusing on what students would build…
…and started focusing on how they would think.
Instead of a hands-on build, I created a “Change My Mind” style task where students had to:
- analyze a situation
- make a claim
- defend their reasoning
- critique each other’s thinking
Same math.
Completely different experience.
And the results?
- stronger engagement
- deeper conversations
- more meaningful learning
That’s when it clicked:
It’s not about making projects more fun.
It’s about making the thinking more meaningful.
What’s Actually Going Wrong in Math Projects
If your math projects haven’t worked the way you hoped, it usually comes down to three things:
1. The Math Isn’t Clear
Students don’t fully understand what they’re learning or why it matters.
2. The Product Takes Over
The focus shifts to creating something instead of understanding something.
3. The Project Doesn’t Fit Your Students
It’s too big, too vague, or not aligned to your classroom reality.
None of these are teacher failures.
They’re design problems.
What Effective Math Projects Do Differently
Strong math projects start in a completely different place.
Not with:
“What would be fun?”
But with:
- What is the math I want students to understand?
- Where does this show up in real life?
- What would students actually need to figure out?
From there, everything else is built around the thinking.
This is where that framework comes back:
✔️ Real
✔️ Relevant
✔️ Rigorous
When all three are present:
- the purpose is clear
- the math stays central
- engagement becomes a byproduct
A Better Way to Design Math Projects
Here’s a simple comparison.
Instead of:
Design a roller coaster using quadratics.
Try:
Design a model that predicts how high and how far a rocket will travel—and justify your decisions using data.
Same math.
But now students are:
- modeling
- making decisions
- explaining reasoning
That’s the difference between a project that looks engaging… and one that actually works.
A Small Shift You Can Try This Week
You don’t need to scrap math projects altogether.
You just need to shift your starting point.
Next time, begin with:
- The math
- The real-world connection
- The structure
Not the activity.
That one shift can completely change the outcome.
What This Means for Your Classroom
Not all math projects are worth your time.
And that’s okay to admit.
But when they are designed well, they can be incredibly powerful.
Because students aren’t just completing tasks.
They’re thinking, reasoning, and making sense of math in a meaningful way.
Not Sure When to Use Projects vs. Practice?
If you’re trying to figure out when a project makes sense (and when it doesn’t) I’ve got a free guide to help.
It walks you through how to make intentional decisions without overcomplicating your planning.
Grab it here:
https://moorethanjustx.myflodesk.com/practice
Until next time, keep it real.
Listen & Connect
Listen to the episode: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2187419/episodes/18971206
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