Your polynomial is a quadratic, a second degree polynomial, to be exact. It can be factored to solve for those values of x you are looking for. Depending upon how you're factoring in class, solving can be done 1 of several ways but the never-fail way is the quadratic formula. Putting those values into the quadratic formula gives us this:

which simplifies to

. We have to deal with the square root of -11 now. Rewriting using the imaginary i gives us

. Since -1 is equal to i^2, we can make that replacement in our formula:

. We can now pull out a single i from the i^2 and write the answer in standard form.

.

. Standard form is

. There you go!