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Elkhart Community Schools Asking Questions Introducing Strategy#2
When kids are little…. They can’t stop asking questions.  They drive their family crazy with,  “ Why does the kitty land on its feet  when you throw it in the air?  Why do  I have two eyes? Why do I have to go to  bed?”  Relentlessly, they examine their environment, trying to  make sense of it. Elkhart Community Schools
Elkhart Community Schools However…. … many kids don’t come to  school with language  skills sophisticated enough to  allow them to formulate formal  questions. …
Elkhart Community Schools Why is this a  problem?
The Importance of Building  “Schema” Building conceptual frameworks or  schema  is the way in which the mind  stores and retrieves data. Abstract words are important in  building  schema  because they allow the mind to group data. Elkhart Community Schools
Elkhart Community Schools How Questioning Skills  Help With Learning “ Absolutely crucial to building  conceptual frameworks or  schema  is  the ability to ask a question syntactically.” “ When an individual cannot ask questions,  he/she is like a computer without a  keyboard.  It is very difficult to  access  data.” Ruby Payne
Elkhart Community Schools Put in a simpler way… “ Without questioning skills, you’re just a passenger on someone else’s tour  bus. You may be on the highway but someone else is doing the driving.” Jamie McKenzie
Elkhart Community Schools Good questioning skills require… Formal  Language  Structures
Sentences follow standard syntax Questions are posed in syntactically correct form Word choices are “specific”.  Elkhart Community Schools With  formal  language:
Why is this important? When  casual or heritage   language is used, only about 400-500 vocabulary words are employed. The words used are  general  and not  specific . Dependent upon  nonverbal  cues. Ruby Payne (adapted) Elkhart Community Schools Many children come to school able to only use  casual  language or  heritage  Language.
Students might pose a question as a statement with inflection and nonverbal cues such as…. “ Your sister married?” In  “formal language,”  the verb may go first followed by the subject. “ Is  your sister married?” Elkhart Community Schools
Unable to use the kind of language school requires… …  many kids tend to sit back  and let the teacher ask the  questions. They fail to get engaged  in the process of trying to understand their school world. Elkhart Community Schools
helps students establish a purpose for reading and be more focused. encourages students’ curiosity  enough to stay with the material until they understand.  Being able to ask questions… Elkhart Community Schools
helps to make the text clearer.  takes students to deeper meaning to help them understand text Cris Tovani (adapted) Elkhart Community Schools Being able to ask questions…
Elkhart Community Schools Teaching  Questioning  Strategies
Elkhart Community Schools The Gradual Release of Responsibility Teacher Modeling Guided Practice Independent Practice Independent Application
Elkhart Community Schools Step 1 – Teacher Modeling When we show kids  how  we reap big rewards.
Elkhart Community Schools “ Thinking Aloud”:   “ The think aloud give the students the opportunity to see our thinking when we read, the connections, we make, the questions we ask, our inferences and our predictions.” “ It is through the read aloud that teachers show students their thinking process when reading.”   from  Strategies That Work   Guided Reading
Elkhart Community Schools Modeling a “Think Aloud” photos / illustrations  picture books personal reading material classroom materials short text / lifted text poetry / musical lyrics
Elkhart Community Schools Teacher to Students… “ Last night I was reading this book and while I was reading, I found myself asking several questions about the text.”  Let me read this passage to you …..
Model to students that questions can come…. Before Reading During Reading After Reading Elkhart Community Schools
Using a photo or picture to teach questioning: I wonder where the truck is going. I wonder what the truck is carrying. I wonder if the economy will allow truckers to keep their jobs. Tell a partner.. “ I wonder…” Elkhart Community Schools
Elkhart Community Schools Step 2 – Guided Practice Guided Practice provides kids with a  scaffold  to help them grow towards independence.
Elkhart Community Schools Guided Practice Charts: * Two or Three Column charts * KWL Charts * Anchor Charts
Elkhart Community Schools Types of Questions for Anchor Chart: Questions which require only a brief answer or a yes/no answer. Questions where there is only one correct answer. Questions where the answer is open-ended. Questions which require a detailed, complex answer Questions which do not require any definite answer and are more interpretive or inferential. Guided Practice
Elkhart Community Schools THICK QUESTIONS THICK questions address large, universal concepts… For instance, “What is  photosynthesis?”  You could not answer that  question with one word. The  answers are long and involved  and need to be researched.
Questions that can be answered with a number or a simple “yes, or No”  fall in this category. For instance,“How many planets are there?” You use thin questions to  understand specific details. Elkhart Community Schools THIN QUESTIONS
Structure of Questions Most of us think of these words when we think of questions: Who? What? When? Where? How? Why? Elkhart Community Schools
But questions can also look like this… Which of the following statements fits with . . .? Can you think of an example. . .? Could, should, would. . .? If this story happened ….? Does she/he mean that. . .? In what ways. . . ? Elkhart Community Schools
Elkhart Community Schools Guided Practice Reciprocal Teaching:  Facilitates a group effort between teacher and students as well as among students in the task of bringing meaning to text. Students and teacher take turns in leading a dialogue about text.  Four activities are incorporated into the technique:  prediction, questioning, summarizing and clarifying.
Elkhart Community Schools Teaching “I wonder…” statements: Sometimes students find it easier to pose questions in the form of “I wonder…” statements.  After generating the I wonder statements, teachers can demonstrate how the statement can be changed to a question with the question word coming first. Guided Practice
Teaching coding for questioning Answered directly in your text  -  A Answered from someone’s background knowledge-  BK Inferred (figured out) from text-  I Answered by further discussion- D Requiring further research-  RS Signaling confusion-  Huh? Elkhart Community Schools Are questions: Harvey and Goudvis Guided Practice
Other ideas for questioning Elkhart Community Schools Teacher reads a passage. Student asks a question to answer.  Take turns reading and asking questions. Reread a story at least three times. Keep a list of questions and see how they change. Look at the front cover of a book.  In two minutes, see how many questions you can create about it.
Elkhart Community Schools Step 3: Independent Practice Students need to be able to use questioning strategies  “on their own” (OTO)  to become metacognitive, strategic readers.  They need to learn to use the tools available to them that lead them to independent application.
Elkhart Community Schools Independent Practice Display anchor charts and previously worked on charts on display in the room. Provide tools such as Question Matrix,  Bloom’s Taxonomy, and Six Thinking Hats Two Column Note worksheets /Graphic Organizers and Webs Small group and / or work in pairs Play Jeopardy  or other games Provide sticky notes for coding text
Elkhart Community Schools Tools for  Independent Practice
Elkhart Community Schools (C. Weiderhold ‘Co-operative Learning and Critical Thinking’ in Langrehr,  Better Questions, better Thinking Book 2,  Longman Cheshire, Melbourne, 1993 ) The Question Matrix   EVENT SITUATION CHOICE PERSON RESAON MEANS PRESENT What Is? Where/When is? Which did? Who is? Why is? How is? PAST What did? Where/ When did? Which did? Who did? Why did? How did? POSSIBIL-ITY What can? Where/ When can? Which can? Who can? Why can? How can? PROBAB-ILITY What would? Where/ When would? Which would? Who would? Why would? How would? PREDIC-TION What will? Where/ When will? Which will? Who will? Why will? How will? IMAGIN- ATION What might? Where/ When might? Which might? Who might? Why might? How might?
Elkhart Community Schools Six Thinking Hats (de Bono) White Hat Thinking:  facts, figures, information needs and gaps. Red Hat Thinking:  intuition, feelings, emotions Black Hat Thinking:  judgment, caution Yellow Hat Thinking:  logical positive, why something will work, its benefits, value Green Hat Thinking:  creativity, alternatives, proposals, changes Blue Hat Thinking:  overview or process, metacognition
Elkhart Community Schools Bloom’s Taxonomy Knowledge Comprehension Application Analysis Synthesis Evaluation
Practicing Questioning in a Group Elkhart Community Schools Find a small group of brilliant learners. 1 Decide how to read your text—aloud or silently. 2 Everyone writes 1-2 questions that could be answered. 3 Ask your questions first. Call on a volunteer to answer.  4 Ask for other volunteers to ask their questions. 5 Don’t allow  YES/NO questions.  Ask “Why do you think this?”  6
Elkhart Community Schools Step 4:  Independent Application The goal of comprehension instruction is to help all students take responsibility for their own learning and be self-directed rather than teacher directed.
Elkhart Community Schools Metacognition                                                                                   Making Connections Asking Questions Expanding Vocabulary Predicting Using Your Senses Deciding Importance Making Inferences Summarizing and Synthesizing Building Fluency Repairing Comprehension
The Payoff You understand that hearing others’ questions inspires  new ones of your own;  likewise, listening to others’  answers can also inspire  new thinking.”  Debbie Miller Elkhart Community Schools

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Ask Questions - PowerPoint

  • 1. Elkhart Community Schools Asking Questions Introducing Strategy#2
  • 2. When kids are little…. They can’t stop asking questions. They drive their family crazy with, “ Why does the kitty land on its feet when you throw it in the air? Why do I have two eyes? Why do I have to go to bed?” Relentlessly, they examine their environment, trying to make sense of it. Elkhart Community Schools
  • 3. Elkhart Community Schools However…. … many kids don’t come to school with language skills sophisticated enough to allow them to formulate formal questions. …
  • 4. Elkhart Community Schools Why is this a problem?
  • 5. The Importance of Building “Schema” Building conceptual frameworks or schema is the way in which the mind stores and retrieves data. Abstract words are important in building schema because they allow the mind to group data. Elkhart Community Schools
  • 6. Elkhart Community Schools How Questioning Skills Help With Learning “ Absolutely crucial to building conceptual frameworks or schema is the ability to ask a question syntactically.” “ When an individual cannot ask questions, he/she is like a computer without a keyboard. It is very difficult to access data.” Ruby Payne
  • 7. Elkhart Community Schools Put in a simpler way… “ Without questioning skills, you’re just a passenger on someone else’s tour bus. You may be on the highway but someone else is doing the driving.” Jamie McKenzie
  • 8. Elkhart Community Schools Good questioning skills require… Formal Language Structures
  • 9. Sentences follow standard syntax Questions are posed in syntactically correct form Word choices are “specific”. Elkhart Community Schools With formal language:
  • 10. Why is this important? When casual or heritage language is used, only about 400-500 vocabulary words are employed. The words used are general and not specific . Dependent upon nonverbal cues. Ruby Payne (adapted) Elkhart Community Schools Many children come to school able to only use casual language or heritage Language.
  • 11. Students might pose a question as a statement with inflection and nonverbal cues such as…. “ Your sister married?” In “formal language,” the verb may go first followed by the subject. “ Is your sister married?” Elkhart Community Schools
  • 12. Unable to use the kind of language school requires… … many kids tend to sit back and let the teacher ask the questions. They fail to get engaged in the process of trying to understand their school world. Elkhart Community Schools
  • 13. helps students establish a purpose for reading and be more focused. encourages students’ curiosity enough to stay with the material until they understand. Being able to ask questions… Elkhart Community Schools
  • 14. helps to make the text clearer. takes students to deeper meaning to help them understand text Cris Tovani (adapted) Elkhart Community Schools Being able to ask questions…
  • 15. Elkhart Community Schools Teaching Questioning Strategies
  • 16. Elkhart Community Schools The Gradual Release of Responsibility Teacher Modeling Guided Practice Independent Practice Independent Application
  • 17. Elkhart Community Schools Step 1 – Teacher Modeling When we show kids how we reap big rewards.
  • 18. Elkhart Community Schools “ Thinking Aloud”: “ The think aloud give the students the opportunity to see our thinking when we read, the connections, we make, the questions we ask, our inferences and our predictions.” “ It is through the read aloud that teachers show students their thinking process when reading.” from Strategies That Work Guided Reading
  • 19. Elkhart Community Schools Modeling a “Think Aloud” photos / illustrations picture books personal reading material classroom materials short text / lifted text poetry / musical lyrics
  • 20. Elkhart Community Schools Teacher to Students… “ Last night I was reading this book and while I was reading, I found myself asking several questions about the text.” Let me read this passage to you …..
  • 21. Model to students that questions can come…. Before Reading During Reading After Reading Elkhart Community Schools
  • 22. Using a photo or picture to teach questioning: I wonder where the truck is going. I wonder what the truck is carrying. I wonder if the economy will allow truckers to keep their jobs. Tell a partner.. “ I wonder…” Elkhart Community Schools
  • 23. Elkhart Community Schools Step 2 – Guided Practice Guided Practice provides kids with a scaffold to help them grow towards independence.
  • 24. Elkhart Community Schools Guided Practice Charts: * Two or Three Column charts * KWL Charts * Anchor Charts
  • 25. Elkhart Community Schools Types of Questions for Anchor Chart: Questions which require only a brief answer or a yes/no answer. Questions where there is only one correct answer. Questions where the answer is open-ended. Questions which require a detailed, complex answer Questions which do not require any definite answer and are more interpretive or inferential. Guided Practice
  • 26. Elkhart Community Schools THICK QUESTIONS THICK questions address large, universal concepts… For instance, “What is photosynthesis?” You could not answer that question with one word. The answers are long and involved and need to be researched.
  • 27. Questions that can be answered with a number or a simple “yes, or No” fall in this category. For instance,“How many planets are there?” You use thin questions to understand specific details. Elkhart Community Schools THIN QUESTIONS
  • 28. Structure of Questions Most of us think of these words when we think of questions: Who? What? When? Where? How? Why? Elkhart Community Schools
  • 29. But questions can also look like this… Which of the following statements fits with . . .? Can you think of an example. . .? Could, should, would. . .? If this story happened ….? Does she/he mean that. . .? In what ways. . . ? Elkhart Community Schools
  • 30. Elkhart Community Schools Guided Practice Reciprocal Teaching: Facilitates a group effort between teacher and students as well as among students in the task of bringing meaning to text. Students and teacher take turns in leading a dialogue about text. Four activities are incorporated into the technique: prediction, questioning, summarizing and clarifying.
  • 31. Elkhart Community Schools Teaching “I wonder…” statements: Sometimes students find it easier to pose questions in the form of “I wonder…” statements. After generating the I wonder statements, teachers can demonstrate how the statement can be changed to a question with the question word coming first. Guided Practice
  • 32. Teaching coding for questioning Answered directly in your text - A Answered from someone’s background knowledge- BK Inferred (figured out) from text- I Answered by further discussion- D Requiring further research- RS Signaling confusion- Huh? Elkhart Community Schools Are questions: Harvey and Goudvis Guided Practice
  • 33. Other ideas for questioning Elkhart Community Schools Teacher reads a passage. Student asks a question to answer. Take turns reading and asking questions. Reread a story at least three times. Keep a list of questions and see how they change. Look at the front cover of a book. In two minutes, see how many questions you can create about it.
  • 34. Elkhart Community Schools Step 3: Independent Practice Students need to be able to use questioning strategies “on their own” (OTO) to become metacognitive, strategic readers. They need to learn to use the tools available to them that lead them to independent application.
  • 35. Elkhart Community Schools Independent Practice Display anchor charts and previously worked on charts on display in the room. Provide tools such as Question Matrix, Bloom’s Taxonomy, and Six Thinking Hats Two Column Note worksheets /Graphic Organizers and Webs Small group and / or work in pairs Play Jeopardy or other games Provide sticky notes for coding text
  • 36. Elkhart Community Schools Tools for Independent Practice
  • 37. Elkhart Community Schools (C. Weiderhold ‘Co-operative Learning and Critical Thinking’ in Langrehr, Better Questions, better Thinking Book 2, Longman Cheshire, Melbourne, 1993 ) The Question Matrix   EVENT SITUATION CHOICE PERSON RESAON MEANS PRESENT What Is? Where/When is? Which did? Who is? Why is? How is? PAST What did? Where/ When did? Which did? Who did? Why did? How did? POSSIBIL-ITY What can? Where/ When can? Which can? Who can? Why can? How can? PROBAB-ILITY What would? Where/ When would? Which would? Who would? Why would? How would? PREDIC-TION What will? Where/ When will? Which will? Who will? Why will? How will? IMAGIN- ATION What might? Where/ When might? Which might? Who might? Why might? How might?
  • 38. Elkhart Community Schools Six Thinking Hats (de Bono) White Hat Thinking: facts, figures, information needs and gaps. Red Hat Thinking: intuition, feelings, emotions Black Hat Thinking: judgment, caution Yellow Hat Thinking: logical positive, why something will work, its benefits, value Green Hat Thinking: creativity, alternatives, proposals, changes Blue Hat Thinking: overview or process, metacognition
  • 39. Elkhart Community Schools Bloom’s Taxonomy Knowledge Comprehension Application Analysis Synthesis Evaluation
  • 40. Practicing Questioning in a Group Elkhart Community Schools Find a small group of brilliant learners. 1 Decide how to read your text—aloud or silently. 2 Everyone writes 1-2 questions that could be answered. 3 Ask your questions first. Call on a volunteer to answer. 4 Ask for other volunteers to ask their questions. 5 Don’t allow YES/NO questions. Ask “Why do you think this?” 6
  • 41. Elkhart Community Schools Step 4: Independent Application The goal of comprehension instruction is to help all students take responsibility for their own learning and be self-directed rather than teacher directed.
  • 42. Elkhart Community Schools Metacognition                                                                                   Making Connections Asking Questions Expanding Vocabulary Predicting Using Your Senses Deciding Importance Making Inferences Summarizing and Synthesizing Building Fluency Repairing Comprehension
  • 43. The Payoff You understand that hearing others’ questions inspires new ones of your own; likewise, listening to others’ answers can also inspire new thinking.” Debbie Miller Elkhart Community Schools