The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options, context, or further references attached, we can say the following.
The problem-solving process and how it was used to determine Texas' participation in the Texas Revolution stemmed from serious issues provoked mainly after the promulgation of the "Seven Laws" issued by the Mexican government led by Antonio López de Santana.
Mexicans and Texans that lived in the Texas territory refused to follow through with those laws.
People from the United States were forced to learn Spanish and that did not appeal to them. They also had to change religion. Form Protestant Christianity to Catholicism that was the most dominant religion in México. Racial issues also were part of the problem in that there was zero tolerance when it came to deciding who were the best citizens, the Mexicans, or the Americans.
The Texas Revolution started with the battle of Gonzalez in October 1835 and ended after the battle of San Jacinto in April 1836.