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Bon Jovi clip – Have a nice day http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPuOY3V22vo Why you want to tell me how to live my life? Who are you tell me if its black or its white?. Questioning: What’s in a question?. Mock the week video http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4d1VWNPqVU&feature=related.
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Bon Jovi clip – Have a nice day • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPuOY3V22vo • Why you want to tell me how to live my life? • Who are you tell me if its black or its white?
Questioning: What’s in a question? Mock the week video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4d1VWNPqVU&feature=related
Socrates • If teaching is the act of asking questions, it’s important that we think about them and plan appropriately
Why is it important to get questioning right? • Most common form of interaction in the classroom • 400 questions a day • 70,000 questions in a school year • 1/3 of teaching time is spent asking questions • Most questions are answered in less than a second
Why ask a question? • The purpose of questioning in a lesson: • To develop interest and motivate students to become actively involved in lessons • To evaluate students’ preparation and check on homework or classwork completion • To develop critical thinking skills and inquiring attitudes • To review and summarize previous lessons • To nurture insights by exposing new relationships • To assess achievement of instructional goals and objectives • To stimulate students to pursue knowledge on their own
Different types of questioning • Closed questions: • Useful for assessing pupil knowledge • What temperature does water freeze at? • Who wrote Great Expectations? • Open questions: • Useful for assessing/drawing out pupil understanding • Should the Amazon rainforest be developed? • If you changed your name, would you be a different person? • Lead Practitioner training: each subject will have a range of different types of questions
Video Clip 1 • What are the limitations of this approach to questioning? • How could the questioning be improved to develop and challenge the learner’s thinking? • Answer on your sheet
Some key ideas • Involving all students • Only closed questions asked • No hands up rule • Be a fixed focal point during the questioning • Adjust who you are targeting – SEN and MAT pupils • Differentiate questions according to student needs • Give pupils time to discuss in pairs before answering
The three little pigs • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WR4L_t6IAfc • Questioning • On your A3 sheet as a group create, 3 closed and 3 open questions about the story
Bloom’s Taxonomy A system designed to stretch and develop students cognitive processes
Bloom’s Taxonomy • On your worksheet is a copy of the Bloom’s Taxonomy and some questions • Match the appropriate question to the correct rung on the ladder
Applying the questions to Bloom’s Taxonomy 4 7 5, 8 6 2 1, 3
Resisting the urge • Video clip 2 – Mixture of closed and open questions also including think time for students • Wait-time • The amount of time you let a pupil think for before answering a question • Give pupils time to discuss in pairs before answering • Important for open questions • Allow SEN questions longer to think • Don’t jump in • Avoid jumping in to correct the pupil immediately • Let the pupil correct themselves or encourage others to come up with a correct answer
Possible ideas for discussion in faculty areas • Students asking questions: • Not only as teachers should we be concerned about the quality of our questioning but the quality of the questions that our pupils are asking • Stimulate students to pursue knowledge on their own • This is particularly important as we seek to encourage our pupils to be confident independent learners