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YOU HAVE TO KNOW WHEN THE LIGHT BULB IS REALLY ON!
DID YOU GET
THAT?
WHAT’S THE
ANSWER?
The one doing all the work [talking], is the
one doing all the learning!
Wong & Wong
monologue, complete outline, notes, solutions
FALSE
I was once you!
•I was desperate!•I was tired!•I just wanted some answers!
But even when I got them, I was still flunking the test! What was up?
THE TESTS ASKED THINKING QUESTIONS—ANALYZE THIS, EVALUATE THAT! I HAD TO START REALLY LEARNING!
1980
REALLY UNDERSTANDING MATTERS!
Poof!
TUTOR: I am not asking you so many questions because I don’t know or I am a jerk trying to embarrass you. I am trying to be sure you are ready for the test because I won’t be there to help you!
Where’s the
cafeteria?
Where do
YOU think it is
. . . ?
Bloom’s Taxonomy
START WITH RECALL QUESTIONS
• Explain that part back and I’ll see what I’ve forgotten.
• What is the next step?• Fill in the blanks. • Identify these parts.• Define these terms.• Explain the assignment.
CRITICAL THINKING
=45% CAN’T
From a study of 2,300 sophomores from 24 different schools (Arum, 2011)
Bloom’s Taxonomy
TheGOAL
of colleg
e!
BUILD TO THINKING QUESTIONS
• Can you give an example?• Can you give a counter-
example?• Why. . . ? • What if . . . ?• How can you apply your
text to your notes? • How does chapter 1 relate
to chapter 2?• Was that a good thing or
a bad thing?
WAIT 7 SECONDS
Pythagoras said it was the perfect number!
7 days of the week 7 wonders of the world 7 deadly sins 7 seas 7 days to create the world
There isn’t anything magical about
this number. It is a random number
for counting inside your head to be
sure you allow enough time for a
student to think first for himself.
• Let’s take some time to think about that.
• [Tutor silence]
STRUGGLING? ENCOURAGE WRESTLING
Only by WRESTLING with the conditions of the problem at first hand, seeking and finding his own way out, does he [the student] think.
Dewey, 1916, p.159-160
Talk it out. The right answer
usually doesn’t come right away.
Learning is a struggle!
STUCK? GIVE PROMPTS AND HINTS
You are the coach—guiding, encouraging, cheering, gently correcting. Help them talk their way toward the right answer.
Let’s look at your notes.
Let’s look at your book.
What was it the professor said today?
Talk about it out loud.
Tell me more.
WRONG ANSWER? MAKE THEM THINK ABOUT THEIR THINKING
The development of effective study skills depends crucially on the learner being able to assess what they know and do not know [metacognition].National Center for Education
DON’T SAY:No. Not that.Anybody else?No, it’s. . . Ask the questions that help the client to see that the answer is faulty. Do it in a way that makes the client feel awesome about discovering that he is wrong! That is as important as celebrating being right!
RECITATION? MAKE THEM STATE IT IN THEIR OWN WORDS
Four-year old Viv entertained her parents’ party guests who all happened to be mathematicians by reciting the formula for the area of a triangle: “Area equals one-half base times height, Papa!” Everyone thought little Viv was very smart! Was she?
Good! But now explain that in your own words, just like you were talking to a friend.
ASK YOU A QUESTION? RESPOND WITH A QUESTION!
Socratic Dialogue is replying to questions with questions to help one find the truth [answer] or at least the wrongness of a previously thought truth [answer].
What is the answer to #7? How is that problem like
#6?
What is a Rogerian argument?
Have you ever had an argument with someone and made some concessions? Give an example.
A TIME TO BE A SAGE ON THE STAGE
TUTOR SUPERSTAR!
As much as we want you to interact and involve the client in activities and dialogue,
there will be frequent times when you must stand and deliver.
But you are ever mindful that your “performance” is always followed by FINDING THE FALSE LIGHT BULB.
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