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Bagels, Pico, Fermi

Objectives

In this number game, students work as a class to figure out a three-digit mystery number. Students use logic and the process of elimination to find the answer. It is a great time filler when there are 10 minutes left in class, and once students learn the rules, they can lead the exercise themselves.

Procedure

The teacher (or student leader) thinks of a three-digit number. Do not start the number with a zero (012 is no good, though 102 is fine), and do not use the same digit twice (122 and 212 are both unacceptable). The first few times you play, we suggest you write the number down. When students start guessing, it's easy to forget your number!

Prepare the board by writing the digits 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 and then, below that, three blank spaces. When students eliminate a particular digit, you can cross it off the list. When students think they are certain of a digit, you can write it in the appropriate blank space.

Students now try to guess the number. We only call on students who raise their hands and ignore all other guesses. Call on a student and write his or her number on the board. If the mystery number were 567, here is how the game might progress:

  • If a student guess has no correct digits, the teacher responds with the word Bagels, and writes the letter B next to the guess. Those digits may now be crossed off the list because they have been eliminated.
    guess: 123    response: B
  • If a student guess has one or more correct digits, but none is in the correct position, write one letter P (for Pico) for each correct digit.
    guess: 125    response: P (The 5 is correct, but in the wrong place.)
    guess: 175    response: PP (5 and 7 are both correct, but in the wrong places.)
  • If a student has one or more correct digits, and they are in the correct places, write one letter F (for Fermi) for each digit.
    guess: 543    response: F (The 5 is correct and in the correct place.)
    guess: 597    response: FF (5 and 7 are both correct and in the correct places.)
  • Finally, if a digit is correct but in the wrong place and another is correct and in the correct place, write a P and an F as appropriate. We always list the Ps first, so as not to give away too much information.
    guess: 357    response: PF (P for the 5. F for the 7.)
    guess: 573    response: PF (P for the 7. F for the 5. List P first.)
    guess: 576    response: PPF (PP for the 6 and 7. F for the 5. List Ps first.)
  • When a student guesses the entire mystery number correctly with the digits in the correct order, that's a Fermi Fermi Fermi, FFF!
    guess: 567    response: FFF

The above rules may seem complicated, but after a few rounds, it will all seem quite simple. Also, after a few rounds led by the teacher, the student who gets the correct answer may lead the next game, though we suggest that the teacher help out at first.

Here is a sample game with student guesses followed by teacher responses. The mystery number is 684.

Guess Response Explanation
456 PP 4 and 6 are correct but in the wrong places.
123 B No correct digits. 1, 2, and 3 are eliminated.
678 PF P (8) listed first, then F (6), but students can't know for sure.
687 FF Students still can't be sure which ones are the Fermis.
683 FF 6 and 8 must be correct since 3 was eliminated earlier (123 was B).
685 FF Good guess since 456 was PP.
684 FFF Got it!

Here is another sample. The mystery number is 305.

Guess Response Explanation
789 B No correct digits.
123 P 3 is correct but in the wrong place.
321 F Alert students might realize that 2 has been eliminated (123 was P) and that either 3 or 1 could be correct.
345 FF Is the 3 correct? Or are the 4 and 5 correct? Too soon to tell.
389 F The 3 is correct since 8 and 9 have been eliminated (789 was B).
749 B 4 is eliminated. 5 must have been the other Fermi in 345.
365 FF 6 is eliminated.
305 FFF Hooray!

The Names
We don't know the official origin of the name of this game. Bagels are shaped like zeros and indicate that there are no correct digits. Pico (peek-oh), from the Spanish meaning 'beak' or 'peak,' is used in science as a prefix meaning one-trillionth. For example, 1 picometer = 1 trillionth of a meter. Enrico Fermi (fair-mee), 1901-1954, was an Italian-born atomic physicist who later moved to the United States. He won the Nobel Prize in 1938.

Copyright © 2002 by Norman Budnitz. All rights reserved.
Teachers may copy this exercise for use in their classrooms.

Revised: May 10, 2002