QUESTIONS Transforming Learning with Quality QUESTIONS Questioning and Inquiry • Questioning is the first element of Information Inquiry. • Questioning seeds all other processes. • Without questions.

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Transcript QUESTIONS Transforming Learning with Quality QUESTIONS Questioning and Inquiry • Questioning is the first element of Information Inquiry. • Questioning seeds all other processes. • Without questions.

QUESTIONS
Transforming Learning with
Quality QUESTIONS
Questioning and Inquiry
• Questioning is the first element of
Information Inquiry.
• Questioning seeds all other
processes.
• Without questions the inquiry cycle
stops and learning regresses into
read and recite, without testing for
relevance and meaning.
•
Daniel Callison
Wonder and learn!
• Jamie McKenzie –
QUESTIONING.ORG
Questioning is to thinking as yeast is to
bread making. Thinking without
questions is uninspired, flat,
inflexible, unyielding. Questioning
converts thinking into something of
value, transforming matter into
meaning.
Questions and INQUIRY
“Inquiry is not so
much seeking the
right answerbecause often
there is none-bout
rather seeking
appropriate
resolutions to
questions and
issues.”
www.thirteen.org
• “Inquiry should be
motivated by
questions whose
purpose, meaning,
or relation to the
real world are
apparent to the
child.”
Karen Sheingold
Questions are the product
of natural curiosity.
• Teachers need to yield the monopoly on
the right to question.
• Learners need to be encouraged to ask
questions, to wonder, and to generate new
questions as inquiry proceeds.
• Student centered process depends on
questions, as does the authentic
construction of meaning from text.
•
Daniel Callison
Questioning through inquiry – the
foundation of life-long learning
• Student ownership of questioning
process leads to students becoming
content experts.
• As they continue to probe and
explore, students discover the
questions central to the issue at
hand.
•
Dennis Palmer Wolf
Questions as a tool for
assessment
• Renovating and revising questions,
documented in journals and logs, gives an
important insight to progress through
information selection, analysis, and
synthesis.
• Questions help learners identify issues,
frame arguments, and determine what
points need more convincing evidence.
•
Daniel Callison
Types of questionsMcKenzie
• Clarification- What was reliable, valid?
• Sorting and Sifting- What is worth
keeping?
• Elaborating- What is the logical next
step?
• Planning- What has been done or could
be done to address these issues?
More types of ????
• Strategic questions- What do I have?
What do I need? What is the best next
step?
• Unanswerable questions
• Irreverent questions- How can we change
this? Can we trust this?
• Wonder questions-Explore boundaries
• Divergent questions- Beyond what we
have, what else might we need or want to
know?
Another perspective….
YouthLearn.org
• Factual questions
• Interpretive
questions
• Evaluative
questions
Invite opinions,
thoughts, feelings
Galileo.org
• HIGHER ORDER
• RICH
• WORTHY
• ESSENTIAL
• FERTILE
• CONNECTED
• CHARGED
• OPEN
WHO? What? Where? When?
• Factual, single right answer questions are only a
starting point.
• Moving from trivial to essential questions engages
kids in authentic and meaningful learning.
• Factual questions in a brainstorming exercise can
be used in a concept map.
• Factual questions help evaluate comprehension,
help with summary.
• Factual questions lead to short term recall and
need expanded context and meaning.
•
CTAP Region IV
WHY? HOW? Should?
SO WHAT? Which one? What if?
• BIG QUESTIONS encourage kids to think
more deeply and critically.
• BIG questions stimulate students to seek
information on their own.
• BIG questions are open, cannot be
answered with yes or no.
• BIG questions require multiple resources
to be answered.
• BIG questions must be interesting.
•
CTAP Region IV
Excellent Questions are…
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Open-ended
Have more than one word answer
Have more than one answer
Show effort and deep research
Lead to multiple perspectives
Lead to debate
Are interesting, not obvious
Lead to more questions and thinking
CTAP Region IV
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Essential questions…
Probe a matter of considerable importance
Move a learner from understanding to action
Are global and abstract
Go to the heart of what is important to learn and
understand
Lead to enduring truths after the facts have been
forgotten
Endure, shift, lead to larger questions
Cannot be answered completely or in few words
Maintain interest despite mystery
Lead to other questions
Are asked over and over in the course of the
inquiry
Harada and McKenzie
Research Questions
• FOCUS- Does the question focus your
research and include relevant
perspectives?
• INTEREST- Are you excited about your
question?
• KNOWLEDGE- Will the question help you
learn?
• PROCESSING- Will the question help you
understand your topic better?
•
Koechlin/Zwaan
Questions as reflections
• Is my project meaningful and interesting?
• Will there be useful resources I can
understand?
• Have I read widely in relevant literature?
• Is the information supporting my ideas the
most convincing and meaningful?
• What information and search paths were
most useful? Least useful?
• What information inspired me or excited
me about what I could report to others?
•
Violet Harada
Teacher Actions
• Model questioning
• Engage learners in sharing questions
and resources
• Look for variety of questions and
levels of thinking
• Meaning begins with information
from text– who, what, where, when.
• Reward questioning, display questions
•
Promote reading with questions.