Why are questions important? Teachers ask as many as 300 to 400
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Transcript Why are questions important? Teachers ask as many as 300 to 400
Why are questions important?
Teachers ask as many as 300 to 400
questions a day.
Questions guide students’ thinking and
determines how students will process
materials presented to them.
Questions are the single, most influential
teaching activity.
Why
ask questions?
Focus
Student attention
Help students interact with content
Check for understanding
Evaluate the effectiveness of the
lesson
Increase the level of thinking
Different
questions elicit different
thought processes.
Four
types of questions
Convergent
Divergent
Low-level
High-level
Convergent
Have
one correct answer
Convergent questions are needed to help
students sharpen their focus and attention
to detail and accuracy.
What is 3+4?
What are the days of the week?
What are the planets in our solar system?
What year did the US land on the moon?
Divergent
Open-ended,
more than one correct
answer
Divergent questions help students to
delve into imagination and creativity while
at the same time, build their confidence.
What are some examples of amphibians?
What is your favorite book?
What animals are mammals?
Low-level
Requires
only mental recall to be
answered
Building blocks to higher-level thinking
The student only has to remember
something that he/she already knows.
What is the order of the planets in our
solar system?
What are three simple machines?
High-level
The
student must do some kind of
processing of information in order to
answer the question.
The processes include comparing,
describing, inferring, hypothesizing,
analyzing, and making judgments or
evaluations.
Examples
Compare
your community to the
communities of the colonists.
What do you think will happen to this
paper clip when I drop it into the cup of
water? Will it sink or float?
What do you think life was like for the
colonists?
Bloom’s
Most
Taxonomy
widely used classification system
for analyzing educational questions in
the cognitive domain.
Teachers tend to ask primarily low-level
questions and the students lose the
opportunity to think critically.
Bloom’s
Taxonomy
Knowledge
Comprehension
Application
Analysis
Synthesis
Evaluation
Knowledge level
Knowledge questions encourage students to
recall information in the form that they
learned it.
Knowledge level verbs
Defines
Matches
Describes
Names
Identifies
Recalls
Labels
Recites
Lists
Recognizes
Comprehension
level
Encourage students to communicate an
idea or phenomenon in a new or different
form
Comprehension level verbs:
Discriminates
generalizes
Edits
gives examples
Estimates
infers
Explains
predicts
Extends
summarizes
Application level
Encourage students to apply ideas or skills to
new situations or to use the knowledge they
possess to solve a problem.
Application level verbs:
Construct
translate
Demonstrates
relates
Modifies
show
Computes
Put to use
Illustrate
Prove
Analysis level
Requires students to break down something,
such as an idea, into its constituent parts or
to uncover the unique characteristics of a
“thing”.
Analysis level verbs:
Break Down
Differentiate
Classify
Discriminate
Categorize
Simplify
Contrast
Criticize
Debate
Outline
Synthesis level
Encourage students to put the information
back together in imaginative and/or original
ways.
Synthesis level verbs:
Blend
Modify
Construct
Integrate
Create
Combine
Design
Arrange
Develop
Reorganize
Evaluation level
Require students to judge something by
determining a standard and comparing it to the
standard.
Evaluation level verbs:
Appraise
Evaluate
Argue
Grade
Assess
Judge
Critique
Validate
Defend
Justify
Useful
Wait
questioning techniques
time
Phrasing questions
Planning ahead
Teacher response to questions
(redirection, prompting, probing,
praise)
Wait
After
time
asking a question, the teacher
waits 3-5 seconds before accepting
answers
Give students time to think before
answering questions
Results in dramatic changes in
student responses.
Results of Wait time:
The length of student responses is increased
300 to 400%.
Students increase their use of evidence, or of
logic based on evidence, to support their
statements.
The failure to respond to questions decreases
The necessity for disciplinary measures
decreases.
The variety of students participating in
discussion increases.
Students gain confidence in their ability to
construct responses to questions.
Phrasing questions
How questions are phrased impact the quality
of response and the quality of thinking
required.
Don’t begin a question with a name. This
engages only 1 student, all the others are “off
the hook”.
Avoid beginning each question the same way.
“Who can tell me….”
Distributing questions:
Research indicates that many teachers:
Call on high-achieving students more than low
achieving students
Call on boys more than girls
Call on white students more than minority
students
Call on students in the front row more than the
back row
Call on students on one side of the room
Use unequal patterns of questioning, students
have unequal opportunities to process material
and transfer to long-term memory.
Planning
Be
questions
sure to write questions ahead of
time to ensure higher level thinking
questions are utilized
Responding
Once
to student answers
students have responded to a
question, the teacher decides
whether to praise, acknowledge,
redirect, probe, prompt, correct, or
ask a new question.
Praise
Use selectively
Can limit further thinking when viewed as a
terminal response.
Praise must be meaningful
Stay away from global praise- good job
Be specific- I like the way you used your
experience to justify your answer.
Tell why it was a good job.
Redirection
Asking the same divergent (open-ended)
question to several students in a sequence of
uninterrupted by the teacher’s comments.
Allows teachers to get contributions from
several students.
Allows more people to participate in lessons.
Allows class members to continue to process
the question.
Prompting
Leading the student to the correct answer by
a hint or a series of hints.
Encourage the students to take risks and
make educated guesses.
Teaches the students how to use various
thought processes to find answers to
questions and problems.
Prompting is a difficult skill because teachers
cannot plan the hint questions ahead of
time, one has to think on one’s feet.
Probing
Probing is a means of getting students to
elaborate on their initial responses to
questions, particularly when the initial response
to a question has been minimal.
Asking the student for further clarification,
explanation interpretation, etc.
Provides opportunity for more in-depth
thinking.
Correct
Correct misinformation and prompt for correct
information.
Do not repeat the wrong answer, only repeat
back the correct answer.
Students can stop listening after the incorrect
answer is given. Make sure that the students
are paying attention when the correct answer is
given.
Effective practices related to questioning
Plan the questions that are to be asked during
a lesson
Clarify the purpose of the questions
Use a balanced combination of
low/high/convergent/divergent questions