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Build an Inquiring Mind

Build an Inquiring Mind. Ask Good Questions Use the Big6 ™ To Get Good Answers. Students should be PRODUCERS of information. Not merely consumers or movers of information. Central Questions. 1. Why is it important to incorporate inquiry into our instruction?

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Build an Inquiring Mind

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  1. Build an Inquiring Mind Ask Good Questions Use the Big6™ To Get Good Answers

  2. Students should be PRODUCERSof information Not merely consumers or movers of information

  3. Central Questions • 1. Why is it important to incorporate inquiry into our instruction? • 2. Why is it important to ask “good” questions? • 3. How can the Big6™ help incorporate inquiry into • instruction for big projects and every day?

  4. you want to buy a new car. What if . . .

  5. “. . . students need the ability to gather, comprehend, evaluate, synthesize, and report on information and ideas, to conduct original research in order to answer questions or solve problems, and to analyze and create a high volume and extensive range of print and nonprint texts in media forms old and new. The need to conduct research and to produce and consume media is embedded into every aspect of today’s curriculum. In like fashion, research and media skills and understandings are embedded throughout the Standards rather than treated in a separate section.” Common Core State Standards for ENGLISH LANGUAGE ART S & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects p. 4

  6. “If you teach young ones to question and probe, you equip them to do well on all kinds of tests - state tests, classroom tests and the tests of life.High scores on tests of comprehension and problem-solving can only be achieved when students are urged to think, figure things out and wrestle with tough questions.”“The Great Question Press: Squeezing Import from Content” by Jamie McKenzie http://questioning.org/questionpress.html#wonder

  7. Good researchbegins with good questions Creating Research Programs for An Age of Information by Jamie McKenzie • http://questioning.org/Q6/question.html#anchor128766

  8. Strong or Weak? Research a Native American tribe. • What kind of animal would make a good pet? • When did the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor? • Which South Carolina region is the best place to live? • List Robert E. Lee’s major accomplishments.

  9. What’s so important about the questions we ask our students to investigate? http://faculty.philau.edu/kayk/KKay/articles/BestAnsers.pdf

  10. "Which one" questions ask students to collect information and makeinformed decisions. Instead of asking me to "do a report on Philadelphia," ask me to decide which city in the Mid-Atlantic region is the best place to live."How" questions ask students to understand problems, to weigh options,perhaps from various points of view, and propose solutions. Instead of askingme to do a report on pollution, ask me to propose a solution to an environmental problem in my neighborhood. Ask me how I would invest a windfall of money."What if," or hypothetical, questions ask students to use the knowledge they have to pose a hypothesis and consider options. Ask me "What if theDeclaration of Independence abolished slavery?" or "What if the Germans hadn't sunk the Lusitania?“"Should" questions ask students to make a moral or practical decision basedon evidence. Ask me "Should we clone humans?" or "Should we discontinue trade with China?“"Why" questions ask students to understand cause and effect. "Why" helpsus understand relationships; it helps us get to the essence of an issue. Ask me: "Why do people abuse children?" "Why is the mortality rate higher in one Third World country than another?" For the Best Answers, Ask Tough Questions by Joyce ValenzaThe Philadelphia Inquirer, April 20, 2000 tech.k12 http://faculty.philau.edu/kayk/KKay/articles/BestAnsers.pdf

  11. You’ve got a good question . . .Now what?

  12. Click here

  13. The Big6™ Skills 1. Task Definition 2. Info Seeking Strategies 3. Location & Access 4. Use of Information 5. Synthesis 6. Evaluation

  14. For the YoungestThe Super3TM Plan Do Review Task Definition Information Seeking Strategies Location & Access Use of Information Synthesis Evaluation

  15. Fakebook/Big 6 We began with an introductory flipchart. Big 6 - biography.flipchart 4th Grade Biographies Website sample Fakebook

  16. How can we incorporate the Big6TMprocess into daily classroom activities? “. . . teaching children skills and concepts is ineffective if they do not know how to process and apply the information. I have noticed that the students who approach their learning with a systematic process are more successful.” I often wonder how I could better integrate problem solving strategies into my instruction in a way that was effective and yet did not add more to the existing volume of instruction. This leads me to ask: How could I deliberately introduce the process of “Plan, Do, Review” into my instruction every day? Teresa Waters “Super3 Action Research Report Blending Super3 With Math and Writing: One Teacher’s Quest for Learning” (Grade 3), eNewsletter 10.4, 1 http://big6.com/pages/about/research/super3-action-research-report.php

  17. The Plan • My students learned the Super3: “Plan, Do, Review” in second grade during a research project in conjunction with a nonfiction writing unit. This led me to decide to use these same words on a daily basis within the existing curriculum. The outline of my plan is as follows: • I will mark at least one place each day in my plans where I will deliberately use the words “Plan, Do, Review” as part of the instruction. • I will reflect on the students’ responses and work following this instruction. • I will ask the students to write a reflective response about how they incorporated “Plan, Do, Review” into their work once a week. • I will reflect once a week on what I noticed as a result of the implementation of this instruction. • I began this practice in November, 2009, and continued for 7 weeks, ending the research data collection in January, 2010. • http://big6.com/pages/about/research/super3-action-research-report.php

  18. “. . . I was able to see how my students picked up on the language of the Super3 as I used it in daily instruction. Because I was including this process in my instruction, and connected to their learning, they realized it was important. Soon individual students began to use the words, and incorporating the processes, throughout their day, without my prompting.”

  19. How would you use Big6/Super3 in . . . a math assignment? a writing assignment? a picture book lesson? a science experiment? a social studies lesson?

  20. “They use technology and digital media strategically and capably. Students employ technology thoughtfully to enhance their reading, writing, speaking, listening, and language use. They tailor their searches online toacquire useful information efficiently, and they integrate what they learn using technology with what they learn offline. They are familiar with the strengths andlimitations of various technological tools and mediums and can select and use those best suited to their communication goals.” Common Core State Standards for ENGLISH LANGUAGE ART S & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects p. 7

  21. Technology in Context

  22. Central Questions • 1. Why is it important to incorporate inquiry into my instruction? • 2. Why is it important to ask “good” questions? • 3. How can the Big6™ help me incorporate inquiry into my instruction for big projects and every day?

  23. Good Resources “The Question Mark” by Jaime Mckenziehttp://questioning.org/ Increasing Student Learning through Multimedia Projects by Michael Simkins, Karen Cole, Fern Tavalin, Barbara Means Inquiry Circles in Action by Stephanie Harvey & Harvey Daniels “For the Best Answers, Ask Tough Questions” by Joyce Valenzahttp://tinyurl.com/7hbp7bx Big6™ - http://big6.com/

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