Leo+DadMade for Leo
Solving & Verifying Equations by Substitution
Rung 4 of 4 · Mastery

Verification in the Real World

Out here nobody hands you the answer key — so verifying becomes the answer key you carry yourself. Use it to catch other people's mistakes, and learn to run the whole check backwards.


MasterIn “catch the mistake”, check a classmate's answer. Then switch to the “reverse challenge”.
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Audio WalkthroughComing Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

Verification isn't just a tidy way to finish your own working — it's how you check anyone's: a classmate at the board, a worked answer in a book, even a calculator that you might have typed into wrong. If the sides don't match, something's off, no matter who wrote it.

Catch the Mistake

In the toy's first mode, a classmate is about to write x = 6 for 4x + 5 = 29. Don't argue — substitute. Left side: 4×6 + 5 = 29, right side 29. They match, so let it stand. But if they'd said x = 7, the left would be 33 — and you'd stop them with proof, not just a feeling. That's the move: verify before you trust.

The move: faced with any claimed answer, substitute it into the original. Sides match → trust it. Sides differ → it's wrong, and you can say exactly by how much.

Working Backwards

Now flip it. Switch to the reverse challenge: you're given an equation and a verified, correct solution, and asked to reconstruct the check. For 3x − 2 = 16 with x = 6, what should the left side come to when you substitute? It must equal the right side — 16 — because that's what "verified" means. Run the substitution: 3×6 − 2 = 16. Reading the check both forwards and backwards is the sign you really own it.

Why This Is the Finish Line

Rung 1 showed you that an equation balances. Rung 2 made solving-then-checking a three-line habit. Rung 3 armed you against the near-miss. This rung turns all of that outward: you can now audit any answer, yours or anyone's, and prove it right or wrong on the spot. That self-reliance — never having to wonder "is this actually right?" — is what mastery of equations feels like, and it's the foundation the harder gear (quadratics, Pythagoras) is about to stand on.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

When have you trusted an answer you should have checked?

The reverse one — why must the left side equal the right for a verified solution?

Of the four rungs, which should we re-drag in a fortnight?