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Do you know the
true art of questioning? (If
Students Wrote the Quiz)
Can
you answer "NO" to all 5 questions?
- Do you put our
names at the BEGINNING of directed questions? If you put names
at the beginning of a question, the rest of us will tend to ignore
your
question, since you have already chosen who will do the answering for
you! Wouldnt you, too?
- Do you ask "whole
group" questions like, "Does everyone understand the difference
between
?" Hope not, because it is simply an invitation for
a chorus of "yes" responses and the 2 or 3 of us who do not
understand probably would not let you know because, "everyone must
have understood it but us!" Instead, ask, "Who would like
for me to repeat those directions?"
- Do you repeat
student answers? If you do, then youre teaching us not to
listen to each other, because we know the answer will be repeated by
you! Instead, try other responses such as "Tell us more,"
or "Someone else?"
- Are you always
the "answer-giver" in class? If you turn our questions
back to us, you will encourage us to do our own thinking and learn to
answer our own questions. For example ask, "That is a good question.
What do you think?" After giving us a chance to state an opinion,
the question can then be directed to the class for discussion. At that
point you can add your comments to ours.
- Do you practice
less "wait time" for the slower students than you
do for the smarter ones? Researchers have clearly demonstrated that
teachers
typically wait less than one second after asking a question before
calling on a student, answer the question themselves, or make an additional
comment! Increasing wait time results in dramatic improvements in the
overall quality of class discussions.
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