Stage 8 · Factoring

8.6  Putting Factoring to Work

One routine that picks the right method, plus what factoring unlocks next.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 8.6.1 The master strategy, in order

8.6.1 The master strategy, in order

Almost every wrong answer in factoring comes not from a hard step but from doing the steps in the wrong order — or skipping the first one. So memorize the order, not a pile of special cases. There are only four moves, and you always make them in this sequence.

1GCF first. Before anything else, pull out the greatest common factor. It is the move that is right on every problem, and it shrinks the numbers so the rest is easier.
2Count the terms. What is left in the bracket tells you the method: 2 terms → a difference of squares a2−b2=(a−b)(a+b); 3 terms → a perfect square or cross-multiplication; 4 termsgrouping.
3Apply that method to the bracket.
4Check fully factored. Look at every factor you produced — can any of them factor again? If yes, keep going. If no, you are done.

Watch the routine run on 3x2−12. (1) GCF: both terms carry a 3, so factor it out → 3(x2−4). (2) Count: the bracket has 2 terms. (3) Method: x2−4 is a difference of squares, (x)2−(2)2, so it becomes (x−2)(x+2). (4) Check: neither (x−2) nor (x+2) factors further. The finished answer is 3(x−2)(x+2). Expand it back if you doubt it: 3·(x2−4) = 3x2−12. ✓

1 · Pull out the GCF 2 · Count the terms 2 terms difference of squares 3 terms perfect square / cross 4 terms grouping 4 · check every factor is fully factored
The whole routine on one page: GCF → count terms → matching method → fully factored? The number of terms in the bracket is the signpost that tells you which method to use.
Key idea

Always in this order: GCF first, then count the terms to pick the method (2 → difference of squares, 3 → perfect square / cross, 4 → grouping), then check every factor is fully factored.

🎮 Try itThe method picker

Tell the machine how many terms the polynomial has and whether the terms share a common factor. It names the recommended first move — exactly what the routine above would say.

Number of terms
Shared factor? (0 = no, 1 = yes)
eastmath.com · 8.6 Putting Factoring to Work · 8.6.1 The master strategy, in order