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Questioning Strategies

Question Strategies

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Page 1: Question Strategies

Questioning Strategies

Page 2: Question Strategies

Why are we here?

Page 3: Question Strategies

PYP Standards & PracticesIdentify any standards that are directly related to questioning or thinking skills or tie back into

them.

Page 4: Question Strategies

HERE’S THE ANSWERWHAT’S THE QUESTION?

Page 5: Question Strategies

• Each group will receive several sentence strips which contain an answer.

• Discuss the questions that could lead to each answer. Together choose one or two questions per strip to share with the group.

• Choose one person to share these questions with the whole group.

Page 6: Question Strategies

The ability to think about past or future events calls for

a higher plane of thinking that results, ultimately, in

increased learning.

“Questioning is critical because it requires children to distance

themselves in time and space from the present.” - Sigel and Saunders (1979)

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Why are we here?

Explicitly teach & encourage students to

think about the different types of questions.

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• Becoming aware of and using different types of questions helps teachers determine how well they are engaging their students to think critically and creatively.

Page 9: Question Strategies

Classifying questions

• When students begin to identify and label the different kinds of question, they learn to select different kinds of questions to perform different kinds of thinking.

• This can be done appropriately at any grade level, in any discipline.

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Questions are like a box of...

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TOOLS!

Image courtesy of: wearethebusinessmen.com

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Why bother?

Page 13: Question Strategies

Why bother?• Once students are able to label

questions and use them explicitly, they are better able to practice each type of question thoughtfully.

• As their questioning experience grows, the labels they use become more specific, more sophisticated, it is interesting to share the thinking of others in this area.

Page 14: Question Strategies

JigsawDigging Deeper and Making Connections

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• Home groups of 4

• Expert groups

Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy

de Bono’s 6 Thinking Hats

PYP Concepts

Strategy toolbox – make & take

Page 16: Question Strategies

Jigsaw

• Expert groups

Decide as a group how you want to present your information to your home group

• Home groups

Once everyone has shared, discuss how you could use these structures in your classroom. What do you think you’ll try in the next week or so?

Page 17: Question Strategies

Other hierarchical structures

• Hilda Taba - Inductive Strategy

http://edutechwiki.unige.ch/en/Taba_teaching_strategy_model

• A.L. Costa’s - “Levels of Questioning”

http://www.artcostacentre.com/

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DEARQ

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Making ConnectionsParallel Thinking