Thursday, March 5, 2020
?? How to Ask Great Questions when Teaching
?? How to Ask Great Questions when Teaching How to Ask Great Questions when Teaching Questioning is at the heart of teaching and tutoring. Questions are the number one way inwhich teachers and tutors communicate with their students. Asking good questions meansraising the quality of communication between you and your students.One way to make sureyou always ask good questions is to have a set of questioning frameworks on hand. You canuse these to frame the questions you ask, helping to maintain a high standard, even whentime is against you.Bloomâs Taxonomy is an example we are all familiar with. But here are three otherframeworks you might not have come across:1) Concrete to AbstractThis method involves a gradual transition from one type of thinking to another, as opposedto a specific delineation of skills. That shift is from concrete thinking to abstract thinking.Here is an example:Concrete1) How many ducks are in the pond?2) What colour are the ducks?3) How are the ducks behaving?4) What are the relationships between the ducks?5) What might be influencing the behav iour and relationships of the ducks?6) Why might the ducks have come to be as they are?7) Is all human life mirrored in the vagaries of ducks?8) If ducks could speak, would we understand them?Abstract2) Show Me, Tell Me, Convince MeShow me: Use the phrase âshow meâ as the command part of your question. You might ask astudent to show you what they have done, to show you how they have learnt something, orto show you what something means. The use of the word âshowâ indicates this activityinvolves a basic level of thinking.Tell me: Using the phrase âtell meâ as the command part of your question means you aremaking greater demands on your students. You might ask pupils to tell you what they thinkabout something, to tell you about the structure of something, or to tell you about theorigins of something they have been studying. The use of the word âtellâ indicates thisactivity requires a deeper level of thinking than is the case with the word âshowâ.Convince me: Using t he phrase âconvince meâ as the command part of your question makesgreater demands on your students. You might ask pupils to convince you that they are right,to convince you that something is the case, or to convince you that a certain course ofaction should be taken. The use of the word âconvinceâ indicates this activity requirescomplex thinking â" beyond the level of showing and telling.When using this method, you can ask a number of questions based on each category; youdonât have to limit yourself to one per section. You can develop the method by usingdifferent command words (explain, describe, persuade and so on).3) General to SpecificThis is where your questions begin with a general concern about some given topic or ideabefore gradually progressing to a specific element of that. Here is an example:What are your thoughts on climate change?What do we know about climate change?What effects might climate change have on the world?How might human behaviour connect to these possible effects?How might it be possible to mitigate these effects?What might a plan to alter the behaviour of people in the UK look like?What are the strengths and limitations of such a plan?To what extent do you agree that climate change can be reversed by attempting to alter thebehaviour of individuals?As the questions become more specific, so the challenge increases. Students have to giveincreasingly detailed responses, make more precise use of information and demonstrate amore developed understanding of the topic.Each of these questioning frameworks can be adapted to suit your needs, or used off theshelf â" as in the examples above. In either case, the benefit is the same. You can beconfident in the quality of your questions as the framework takes care of this in advance. Author BioMike Gershon:To read more by Mike, visit one his websites at:www.mikegershon.com orwww.gershongrowthmindsets.com
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