← L² Lab
🤔 It Depends
Card 13
🦷 👕 🥣

Is there one right order?

💭 Think About It

Morning tasks: Brush teeth, get dressed, eat breakfast. Does it matter which comes first? Can you do them in any order, or does one order work best?

🦷→👕→🥣 Order A Brush, dress, eat
vs
🥣→🦷→👕 Order B Eat, brush, dress
Is there only one correct order for morning tasks?

🎯 Explain your thinking

Why did you choose this answer?

🌈 Different Perspectives to Consider
🍳 The Cook Says Some steps must come first

"For baking a cake, order matters A LOT! You can't frost it before you bake it. Some steps depend on previous steps."

🧹 The Tidier Says Flexible order

"When cleaning my room, I can make my bed first or pick up toys first — both work! The order doesn't matter much."

👟 The Dresser Says Depends which items

"Socks before shoes — YES, order matters! But shirt before pants? Either way works fine."

🔢 The Math Thinker Says Sometimes yes, sometimes no

"3 + 5 = 5 + 3, so order doesn't matter in addition. But 10 - 3 ≠ 3 - 10, so order DOES matter in subtraction!"

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

"You did it wrong! That's not the right order!"
"Does the order matter for this?"
"Well... I guess not, actually."
Not all sequences are fixed.
Independence means freedom.

See more guidance →

🧠 Thinking habits this builds:

  • Distinguishing dependent vs. independent tasks
  • Understanding prerequisites and dependencies
  • Recognizing that "different" doesn't mean "wrong"
  • Applying logical sequencing where it matters

🌿 Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):

  • Asking "does this step depend on that step?" before sequencing
  • Accepting multiple valid approaches to tasks
  • Understanding why some instructions must be followed in order
  • Finding personal routines that work for them

How to reinforce: "You noticed that you can get dressed before or after eating — they don't depend on each other! What tasks DO have a required order?"

🔄 When ideas are still forming:

Some children may think there's always a "right" way to do things. Help them identify when order is required (dependencies) vs. when it's preference.

Helpful response: "For some tasks, order matters because one step needs another. For others, you get to choose! Which kind is this?"

🔬 If you want to go deeper:

  • Explore mathematical properties like commutativity (order doesn't matter) vs. non-commutativity
  • Discuss project management and critical paths
  • Consider how algorithms require specific sequences

Key concepts (for adults): Dependencies, prerequisites, commutative vs. non-commutative operations, sequential vs. parallel tasks.