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Zooming Out Using guiding questions to see the big picture

Zooming Out Using guiding questions to see the big picture. Do you ever feel like you need something to tie together the details with the bigger picture?. Zooming out . . . Thinking of higher-level questions in terms of “the big picture.”. 18,000 ft. Tropical Paradise?. Face Analogy.

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Zooming Out Using guiding questions to see the big picture

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  1. Zooming Out Using guiding questions to see the big picture

  2. Do you ever feel like you need something to tie together the details with the bigger picture?

  3. Zooming out . . . Thinking of higher-level questions in terms of “the big picture.”

  4. 18,000 ft.

  5. Tropical Paradise?

  6. Face Analogy Level 1 – Freckles on a face, or one eye

  7. Face Analogy Level 2 – parts of a face

  8. Face Analogy Level 3 – The big picture

  9. Zooming Out Level 1 – Specific facts or parts, often single answer questions. But if that’s all we have, we don’t know the bigger picture, the over-arching concept, how it relates to other concepts, etc. Costa’s Level 1 define describe name identify list observe scan recite

  10. Zooming Out Level 2 – Forming relationships between facts or parts. We can put the smaller parts into a bigger picture. Costa’s Level 2 analyze compare contrast group infer sequence synthesize

  11. Zooming Out Level 3 – Seeing how individual parts or facts relate to a bigger picture, overall concept, or other concepts. We see how parts fit into an overall idea, or can make predictions or hypotheses from the facts. Costa’s Level 3 apply evaluate predict speculate hypothesize imagine judge

  12. Zooming Out We don’t remember or recognize a face by thinking of the number of freckles on the cheeks or by thinking of an eye or a nose. We think of a whole face. Information can often be remembered better if you get how the individual facts, or parts, fit into a larger idea or concept.

  13. Zooming Out Level 1 = a fact (or set of facts) Level 2 = how a set of facts relates to each other Level 3 = how these relationships relate to the world outside of the facts

  14. Zooming Out Level 1 = a fact (or set of facts) - The British and French fought a war - The Stamp Act placed a tax on printed materials - Colonists threw tea off of ships in Boston Harbor

  15. Zooming Out Level 2 = how a set of facts relates to each other 1. The British government was in deep debt from the French and Indian War. Many in the British parliament believed that the American colonies should help pay for the costs of their protection. 2. This British policy later led to the Stamp Act, one of many taxes passed on the colonies. The colonist began to organize protests, letter writing campaigns, the Sons of Liberty, and a network of communication throughout the 13 colonies. 3. After a series of what the colonies perceived as unfair taxes and poor treatment by the British, the organized protests against the British government culminated in a final act of rebellion, the Boston Tea Party. This event would push the British past any ideas of tolerance for the colonies and end any chance of reconciliation.

  16. Zooming Out Level 3 = how these relationships relate to the world outside of the facts A war, unfair taxes, and the dumping of tea – these things ultimately lead to - the signing of the Declaration of Independence - the Revolutionary War - a new United States Government which was designed and organized specifically to try and avoid an oppressive government which did not answer to the people. - how should we, today, deal with a government that continues to pass new taxes in order to continue rampant spending?

  17. Zooming Out Notes consist of facts, but, every once in awhile step back to see how small facts relate to the big idea. Notes (individual facts): The Oregon Trail brings settlers west Gold is discovered in California Transcontinental Railroad is constructed Big Idea: Westward Expansion

  18. Zooming Out • Level 1 = a fact (or set of facts) • Example: vocabulary • import • smuggling • boycott • militia • minutemen • rights • Define boycott. • What is a citizen soldier who is ready to fight at a moment’s notice?

  19. Zooming Out Level 2 = how a set of facts relates to each other Example: vocabulary import smuggling boycott militia minutemen rights 1. How does import contrast with smuggling? 2. Sequence the events leading up to the colonists boycott of British goods.

  20. Zooming Out Level 3 = how these relationships relate to the world outside of the facts Example: vocabulary import smuggling boycott militia minutemen rights 1. Predict what will happen to British merchants if most of the colonists boycott British imports. 2. How did Thomas Jefferson apply the ideas of John Locke (natural rights) to the colonists situation in writing the Declaration of Independence?

  21. Zooming Out Our teaching will be much more meaningful if we are in the habit of stepping back from facts to see their relationship to each other, and to the world beyond the particular section or lecture. Creating guiding questions by year, by trimester, and by unit can help us connect information into a bigger picture.

  22. Zooming Out “When you take notes, you do need to take down the facts, but in doing so, try to see what the facts are leading to. Try to see what principle or what idea they are supporting. Try to see how the pieces of the puzzle fit into the building of the big picture.” - Walter Pauk How To Study for College

  23. Zooming Out The purpose of teaching higher level questions is not only to help students learn to think deeper and to think critically . . . It is also to help them recall what they have learned. It is to provide them a technique for recalling facts by understanding the relationships of parts to the whole (facts to the main ideas).

  24. Zooming Out Some people are detail people . . . They need help relating details to the big picture.

  25. Zooming Out Some people are “big idea” people . . . They need help remembering details within the big idea.

  26. Zooming Out Examples: How did the formation of political parties help or hinder the development of constitutional democracy? What is Jacksonian Democracy, and how did it change American political life both positively and negatively? What were the political and ideological differences which led to and sustained the Cold War? How did ideas of freedom change through different periods of U.S. history?

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