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From my experience, this way will help you a lot. If you still have a problem, do not hasitate to let me know.
In my experiences, at least with young children, usually explicit instruction hampers exploration, innate problem solving, reaching creative solutions, and personal discovery. I do not give answers when a child poses a question. I respond with an inquiry back to them, e.g. "what ideas do you have or how else might you ..." Or, I might try to bridge/scaffold their thinking, e.g. "what are you trying to do? Can you think of a time when you tried to ...?" " How did you do it? How did it turn out? What could you have done differently?" Often in my classroom, I will place a unique or interesting object on a table to see what happens. The first question the children ask is "what is that?" My response is "I'm not sure. What ideas do you have?" 20 children, 20 different ideas - beyond my imaginings. The children are quite adept at justifying their position and there is no right or wrong - simply ideas/perspectives. Fascinating! The same outcome for a problem that needs solving. This approach can be applied in many contexts, curricular & developmental domains, and across age groups. Experiment and have fun!