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Self-questioning. Donna Alvermann, Ph.D. Department of Language & Literacy Education University of Georgia PowerPoint by Achariya Rezak. What is Self-questioning?. Questioning relates to the activity of generating questions before, during, and after reading.
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Self-questioning Donna Alvermann, Ph.D. Department of Language & Literacy Education University of Georgia PowerPoint by Achariya Rezak
What is Self-questioning? • Questioning relates to the activity of generating questions before, during, and after reading. • Questions should not simply test previous learning, but explore new possibilities. • Good questions can guide search for information, lead students to consider new ideas, and prompt new insights. • Self-questioning is the process of encouraging students to engage in their own questioning during reading.
How can teachers use Self-questioning? • Self-questioning can spawn class discussion. • Self-questioning can improve comprehension through more active reading & thinking. • Self-questioning can teach students to monitor their own comprehension.
Self-questioning and domain structures • If students are taught the domain structure of a subject, they can learn how to formulate questions that are related to broader issues relating to the subject, instead of specific ones. • For example, students can learn to formulate questions that relate to a broader theme of Earth Science, like cause and effect, or about issues relating to a specific sphere of Earth Science. In English, students can learn to question the poetic mode of a text, instead of just focusing upon specific details of the text. • This emphasis upon knowing the domain structure of the subject will enable them to apply questions to many different kinds of texts.
Question-Answer Relationships • One example of questioning is Question-Answer Relationships (QARs) (Pearson & Johnson, 1978). • Pearson and Johnson described four different kinds of questions that students can ask about a text. • The first two kinds of questions are about the text itself -- questions about ideas that are explicitly revealed by the text, and questions that are implicitly revealed. • The second two kinds of questions are about the student's "in the head" interactions with a text, and relate to whether the text's author suggested the question, or whether it arose from the student's own thought processes. • In short, student questions can be categorized into four different areas: • "In book" - Explicit / Implicit • "In head" - Author / Student
Reciprocal Questioning • Another example of questioning is Reciprocal Questioning, or ReQuest. This strategy teaches students to formulate their own questions by asking the teacher about the text. • To use this strategy, the teacher first scaffolds the text using pre-reading methods. • Next, students read the text and formulate questions to ask the teacher. • The teacher answers the questions, and then asks the students questions in return. The teacher's questions exemplify the sorts of questions that students can learn to formulate.
Questioning the Author • A third alternative questioning strategy that helps students become more involved in formulating their own questions is Questioning the Author (QtA). • These questions try to emphasize the author's role in the creation of the text, as well as allow students to explore the author's subjectivity, and their own. • They are broken into three categories of questions, the initiating queries, follow-up queries, narrative queries. • Initiating query: • What is author trying to say? What is the message? • Follow-up query: • Does author explain clearly, tell us why? Is there a connect to previously known information? • Narrative query: • What is the author trying to achieve with a certain character or plot?
Example of Self-questioning • One example of Self-questioning is the World Watcher project. • The purpose of the software is to teach scientific factors that contribute to global warming. It involves students role playing the part of expert science advisors to heads of state. • Students learn how to formulate questions and research issues about Global Warming. • Please see the “World Watcher” Power Point for more information.
Summary • Self-questioning is the process of encouraging students to engage in their own questioning during reading. • Teaching domain structure enables students to apply larger questions to many different kinds of texts. • Examples of questioning strategies include QAR, QtA, and ReQuest. • A specific example of software that teaches Self-questioning is World Watcher.