Alex Davani is mostly an A-student at Don Juan Avila Middle School, but he was not good at math last year. To get better grades in math, Davani learned to solve the Rubik's Cube.
Davani wasn't the only one. Teacher Ron McDevitt gave all his students a chance of getting a high grade if they could beat the cube, and he gave more scores for faster times. "A Rubik's Cube is a lot like math," explained McDevitt. "If you make one bad move with the cube, you have to go back a step or start over. At math, it's the same way. It forces you to go slowly and be patient."
For Davani, solving the cube was great fun. With about six months of practice, he could solve the Rubik's Cube in under 30 seconds. So Davani decided to enter a world competition in Las Vegas. Davani is placed in the middle among about 800 competitors, and with more practice, he hopes to raise his position next year. He also got to meet cubers from 37 countries, and had lunch with four of the best cubers.
So how does Davani solve the cube so quickly? "It's mostly just practice" he said. "You will form muscle memory after lots of practice. You memorize the method and you don't even have to think about it. Your fingers move naturally."
"I teach my kids how to solve it and they can vanquish me now," said McDevitt whose best record is around two minutes, much longer than many of his students. "I've never had a student take it as far as Davani and compete. That's pretty cool."