Learning from Mistakes

What Wrong Answers Actually Tell You

Every mistake reveals a mental model. Here's how to decode it.

By KANG TeamFebruary 5, 20257 min read

Most parents focus on whether an answer is right or wrong. But experienced math educators look at *how* a student got the wrong answer. That tells you what mental model they're using — and where it's breaking down.

Mistakes Aren't Random

When students get problems wrong, they're almost never guessing randomly. They're following a consistent (but flawed) pattern of reasoning. If you can identify that pattern, you can fix it at the source.

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Example: A student always adds when they should multiply in counting problems. That's not 'carelessness' — it's a conceptual gap about when choices combine additively vs. multiplicatively.

Common Wrong-Answer Patterns

Here are 5 systematic mistakes we see repeatedly in competition math:

1. Surface-Level Calculation

Problem: 'A number is 5 more than twice another number. Together they equal 23. What's the smaller number?'

Wrong approach: Start plugging in random numbers.

What it reveals: Student doesn't recognize this as an algebraic structure. They're trying to brute-force instead of setting up equations.

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Fix: Teach equation setup as a *structure*. 'Words like "more than" and "twice" have mathematical translations.'

2. Adding Instead of Multiplying (or vice versa)

Problem: 'You have 3 shirts and 4 pants. How many outfits can you make?'

Wrong answer: 3 + 4 = 7

What it reveals: Student hasn't internalized when to add vs. multiply. This is a *counting principle* gap, not a calculation error.

3. Ignoring Constraints

Problem: 'How many 3-digit numbers have all different digits?'

Wrong approach: 10 × 10 × 10 = 1000

What it reveals: Student is computing combinations without tracking the constraint (all different). They see '3-digit number' and jump to 10³ without considering uniqueness.

4. Over-Generalizing Patterns

Problem: 'A sequence goes 2, 4, 8, ... What's the next term?'

Wrong answer: 16 (assuming doubling continues forever)

What it reveals: Student saw the first pattern and stopped looking. They didn't check if the problem might switch to a different rule.

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This is actually a sophisticated trap in competition math. Always check more than 2 terms.

5. Solving the Wrong Question

Problem: 'A shirt costs $20 after a 25% discount. What was the original price?'

Wrong answer: $15 (student computed 20 - 25% of 20)

What it reveals: Student solved 'What's the price after removing 25%?' instead of 'What price, when reduced by 25%, gives $20?' They answered a related but different question.

How to Use This Knowledge

When your child gets a problem wrong:

  1. Don't just say 'That's wrong.' Ask them to explain their reasoning.
  2. Identify which type of mistake it is. Is it a conceptual gap? A constraint they missed? A calculation slip?
  3. Address the *pattern*, not just the specific problem. If they added when they should have multiplied, find 3 more problems with the same structure.
  4. Celebrate when they catch their own mistakes. 'I almost added, but then I remembered this is a multiplication case' is *more valuable* than getting it right the first time.

Mistakes are data. They tell you exactly where understanding breaks down. Use them.

The KANG Approach

Every structure in KANG includes a 'Common Mistakes' section — not to shame errors, but to make them visible. When students see their own thinking pattern described, they go: 'Oh! That's what I'm doing wrong.'

That moment of recognition is where learning happens.

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