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Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom English 384/584 July 26, 2010

Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom English 384/584 July 26, 2010

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Page 1: Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom English 384/584 July 26, 2010

Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom

English 384/584

July 26, 2010

Page 2: Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom English 384/584 July 26, 2010

Introduction the Group Members

Sae Thao

Secondary Education Major

Page 3: Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom English 384/584 July 26, 2010

Introduction the Group Members

Mike Slowinski

High School English teacher

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Introduction the Group Members

Dorothy Seehausen

Composition teacher

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Introduction the Group Members

Kathy Records

Elementary Education Major

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Questions

Teachers: What are the quality of questions your students have asked?

Students: What types of question have you heard in class?

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Presentation Preview

A. What’s happening in the classroom (Mike)

B. Explain the questions sociologuistically (Dorothy)

C. Application and Strategies(Kathy)

Page 8: Students’ Questioning in the Secondary Classroom English 384/584 July 26, 2010

Student Questions

What’s happening in the classroom?

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Student Passivity

Students Not Asking Questions

Electronic Vs. Face-to-Face

Thomas Good’s Passivity Model

Procedural Questions Instead of Conceptual

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Student Passivity - Classroom Factors

Teacher domination Peer pressure Types of activities Self-confidence Unsure how to ask

good questions

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Wardhaugh’s Speech Acts

The functional approach of sentences.

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What…

According to Wardhaugh… Conversations not only

make statements, they perform

actions in the world Establish friendships Achieve cooperation Create a foundation for future interactions

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An example…

Constative utterances: “I had a busy day today.” Connected with events or happenings.

Ethical propositions: “Thou shalt not kill.”

Serve as guidelines to behavior in some world or another.

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For our purpose…

The Performative utterance: For example: “I do.”

Not only saying but doing something

if certain real-world conditions are met.

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J. L Austin’s Five categories…

Performatives Verdictives

Giving a verdict, estimate, grade, or appraisal “Guilty as charged.” “You got an A on your test.”

Exercitives Exercising of powers, rights, or influences

“I pronounce you husband and wife.” “Congratulations! You have just graduated from college.”

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Austin’s Five categories…

CommissivesPromising or undertaking,

announcing an intention “I hereby bequeath” “I intent to teach the best way I know how.”

BehabitivesApologizing, congratulating, blessing, cursing, or

challenging “I apologize” “I challenge you to learn.”

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Austin’s Five categories…

ExpositivesRefers to how one fits an utterance into an argument

or exposition “I argue, I reply, I assume…” “I argue in favor of

my learning outcomes.”

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And so…

A speech act… In some way changes the conditions that exist in the

world. For example:

“I sentence you to five years in jail.” “I sentence you to two hours of detention.” “Hello. How are you?” (friendly) “You jerk!” (not so friendly)

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True/False

A speech act is neither true

nor false in itself.

However, these claims

may be made about its

having been done.

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Sociolinguist Dell Hymes

Hymes' components of a speech event: Setting- scene situation Participants- Speaker, Receiver, other Ends- outcomes and goals Act sequences- form and content Key- manner Instrumentalities- Channel, code Norms- of behavior

and interpretation Genre- style, e.g. lecture, chat

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Wardhaugh says…

“Once we begin to look at utterances from the point of view of what they do, it is possible to see every utterance as a speech act of one kind or other, that is, as having some functional value which might be quite independent of the actual words used and their grammatical arrangement.”

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Laver and Trudgill…

“Being a listener to speech is not unlike being a detective. The listener…has to construct, from an assortment of clues, the affective state of the speaker and a profile of his identity.”

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Communication Model

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A final word

“All the world is a stage, and

we are the players!” Wardhaugh

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Application

The Critical Thinker

“If good thinkers are good questioners then are good questioners good thinkers?” (King, 13)

Inspiring Student Inquiry

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The Critical Thinker

What is Critical Thinking?

"Critical thinking is the intellectually disciplined process of actively and skillfully conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, synthesizing, and/or evaluating information gathered from, or generated by, observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or communication, as a guide to belief and action” (Scriven)

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The Critical Thinker

Introduction

Skeptical but open-minded Looks at different points of view

Values fair-mindedness Respects evidence & reasoning

Respects clarity & precision Will change positions when reasoning

leads them to

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How to Build Your Own Critical Thinker

Teaching How to Ask Questions Question Stems (refer to handout) Semantics & Syntax

Strategies Reciprocal Peer Questioning Reader’s Questions Conference-Style Learning

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Inspiring Student Inquiry

Cooperative LearningHigher achievement & greater productivity

More caring, supportive & committed relationships

Greater psychological health, social competence & self-esteem

(Kagan)

Examples…

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Work Cited

Ciardiello, Angelo. “Did You Ask a Good Question Today? Alternative Cognitive and Metacognitive Strategies.” Journal of

Adolescent and Adult Literacy. 42.3 (Nov. 1998): 210-220. EBSCOhost. Polk Library, UW-Oshkosh, Oshkosh, WI. 23

July 2010.

Good, Thomas, Ricky Slavings, Kathleen Hobson Harel, and Hugh Emerson. “Student Passivity: A Study of Question Asking

in K-12 Classrooms.” Sociology of Education. 60 (July 1987): 181-199. EBSCOhost. Polk Library, UW-Oshkosh,

Oshkosh, WI. 23 July 2010.

< http://www.harding.edu/dlee/bloom.pdf> (21 July 2010).

Hymes, Dell. Foundations of Sociolinguistics: An Ethnographic Approach. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 1974

Kagan, Spencer. Cooperative Learning. San Clemente: Kagan Publishing, 1994.

King, Allison. “Designing the Instructional Process to Enhance Critical Thinking Across the Curriculum.” Teaching of

Psychology 22 (1995): 13-17.

Scriven, Michael and Richard Paul. “Defining Critical Thinking: A Draft Statement for the National Council for Excellence in

Critical Thinking.” (1996) Available <http://www.criticalthinking.org/University/univlibrary/library.nclk > (21 July

2010).

Underwood, Marion K. and Rebecca L. Wald. “Conference-Style Learning: A Method for Fostering Critical Thinking with

Heart.” Teaching of Psychology 22 (1995): 17-21.

Wardhaugh, R. (2008) An Introduction to Sociolinguistics, 5th Edition, Blackwell Publishing, MA