Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Question-Asking as an
Instructional Technique
Anmerkungen:
- 5.5. Designing Questions Toward Thinking and Understanding Rather Than Answers. By Margaret G. McKeown and Isabel L. Beck
- Q-A is a processing component
for: comprehension, problem
solving and other cognitive
abilities
- Goal is to increase student comprehension with text interaction
- Studies show
mixed results: that
asking questions
can improve
students' learning
of text material
- Why?
- What do Questions in the classrooms look like?
- Typically they follow the IRE pattern: teacher
INITIATES a question, the student RESPONDS,
usually briefly and the teacher EVALUATES - and
then goes on to ask another - maybe related,
maybe not question
- This type of question is restricted: students rely on
recall and will frequently get the answer right
- WHAT IS A GOOD QUESTION?
- Not know the answer immediately
- Need to think about question
- Leave room for
students to build
their own
meaning
- Result is a cognitive turmoil that
allows students to struggle with ideas
and thinking
- ENGAGING STUDENTS WITH OPEN QUESTIONS
- What 's the author's message?
- QUESTIONING THE AUTHOR
(QtA) an instructional
approach - open queries
- Answers become less literal
and more thoughtful,
meaningful
- Students response to Open Questions
- Teacher must follow-up and re-voice student response to stimulate ideas, & build meaning for further discussion
- For questions to be effective, they must be organized and sequential
- Story Map - best guide to promote comprehension: unified, mental representation of a story based on logical organization of central story
events, ideas and their interrelationships.
- Knowing where you are
going
- Target key ideas & the connections between ideas
- Prompt student thinking
- Direct toward goal of
building meaning
- What's this about?
- What's going on? What are they up to?
- How does this connect
with what we know?
- help students build understanding of
what they don't know
- helps reveal what students know
- Teacher poses question that can be
answered, by recall and does not promote
understanding or a thoughtful
comprehension process