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The Princess and the Golden Key

The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

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Page 1: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

The Princess and the Golden Key

Page 2: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

A powerful and rich queen had one son.

One day he would be king.

Page 3: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Princesses came from far and wide to seek his hand in marriage.

Page 4: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

But the queen set a challenge for them.

Page 5: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

She took nine small wooden boxes. They were all exactly the same.

Page 6: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

…and nine keys. Eight of the keys were made of iron and one of gold.

Page 7: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

She locked the keys in the boxes. Then she mixed them up so that even she did not know which one held the golden key.

Page 8: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

These were the rules of the challenge.

You may choose one box, and one box only.

Page 9: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Before you choose, you may ask me one question, and if I know, I will answer truthfully.

Page 10: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Then you may borrow anything from anywhere in my palace and use it twice.

Page 11: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

But you cannot damage or open any of the boxes. Then you must choose one box.

Page 12: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

If it contains the golden key to the palace, you may marry the prince.

Page 13: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

If it contains an iron key to the prison, you will spend the rest of your life locked away.

Page 14: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

None of the princesses were willing to take the risk.

So they all left in search of princes whose mothers were less demanding.

Page 15: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

None of the princesses were willing to take the risk.

So they all left in search of princes whose mothers were less demanding.

Prison is, like, totally

lame.

Page 16: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

None of the princesses were willing to take the risk.

So they all left in search of princes whose mothers were less demanding.

I am so out of here!

Page 17: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Meanwhile, in the palace kitchens, a princess from a nearby kingdom worked as a maid. Her father had thought it would do her good to do some real work before settling down to royal life. She disagreed. So she decided that she was going to marry the prince.

Page 18: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Meanwhile, in the palace kitchens, a princess from a nearby kingdom worked as a maid. Her father had thought it would do her good to do some real work before settling down to royal life. She disagreed. So she decided that she was going to marry the prince.

Stuff this! It’s ruining my nails.

Page 19: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

And she did.

The question is, HOW did she do it?

What question did she ask?What did she borrow to help her decide?How did she choose which box to open?

And why was her father right all along?

Page 20: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Nine boxes.Only one gold key.

Ask one question (if you need to).

Borrow something from the palace and use it twice.

Page 21: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king
Page 22: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

There is a clue on the next slide.

Page 23: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

All the boxes look exactly the same. But what will be different about the one with the gold key?

Page 24: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

The princess’s father was right that it did her some good to do some real work. What would she have seen in the kitchen that would help her now?

Page 25: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Imagine you have narrowed it down to just three boxes.

What test could you do on two of them that would show you for certain which one held the golden key?

Page 26: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

How could you do the same test to narrow it down to three boxes in the first place?

Page 27: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

The answer starts on the next slide.

Page 28: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

The question you might need to ask is whether the gold key weighs more than the iron ones.

The same amount of gold is heavier than iron, so the gold key will be heavier.

Page 29: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

That means the box with the gold key will weigh more.

While working in the kitchen, the princess has seen cooks using the scales, so that is what she asks to borrow.

Page 30: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

First, split the boxes into three sets of three. It doesn’t matter which ones go in which set.

Then choose two sets to weigh against each other. It doesn’t matter which sets you weigh.

Page 31: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

If one set is heavier, you know the gold key is somewhere in that set.

Page 32: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

If they weigh the same, all the keys they contain must be iron, so the gold key is in the set you haven’t weighed.

Page 33: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Now you have a shortlist of three boxes.

You choose any two boxes to weigh against each other. Again, it doesn’t matter which you choose.

Page 34: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

If one box is heavier, it’s the one with the golden key.

Page 35: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

If they weigh the same, the gold key is in the box you haven’t weighed.

Page 36: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

So the princess married the prince...

and they lived fairly happily for quite a while.

Page 37: The Princess and the Golden Key. A powerful and rich queen had one son. One day he would be king

Teachers - for other thoughtful things to use in the classroom – including ideas for use from reception to staff training, visit

www.thephilosophyman.comand click on “free stuff”.