Khinfai:
You probably shouldn’t be doing this problem if it is too complex for you, particularly if it could hurt someone other than just you. As Rb1957 suggested, dig out your Strength of Materials, and Theory of Elasticity text books; you have to deal with a transformed section, as a function of the three different E’s. But, you still have three distinct E’s, working together, not some average or calc’d. E. Once the three materials are bonded together (are they really?), they will deflect together when loaded, and now the trick becomes, not over stressing any one of the materials. You must check the shear flow at each one of the bond surfaces (faying surfaces) to be sure that you don’t over stress the allowable bond strength btwn. the two materials, and the glue (whatever?) at that surface. You assume that the strain will be the same in the two materials at that surface, but their E’s don’t change and will lead to different stresses in each material at that surface. Alternatively, if the member is continuously loaded or stressed, then you must also watch out for creep in bonding materials (glues), which will allow the strains to vary at that surface. In the first case you are assuming the strain varies linearly through the depth of the beam, in the latter instance one of the materials has yielded or creep has taken place, at a bond surface, and now the problem does become more complex.