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1 Five top tips for skilful questioning Ideas to try out in your classroom tomorrow Linda Evans March 2014

Five top tips for skilful questioning Ideas to try out in your classroom tomorrow Linda Evans

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Five top tips for skilful questioning Ideas to try out in your classroom tomorrow Linda Evans March 2014. Think about when, why and how you ask questions. Plan questions that promote higher-order thinking. Respond thoughtfully to pupils’ answers Teach pupils to ask questions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Five top tips for skilful questioning Ideas to try out in your classroom tomorrow Linda Evans

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Five top tips for skilful questioning

Ideas to try out in your classroom tomorrow

Linda Evans

March 2014

Page 2: Five top tips for skilful questioning Ideas to try out in your classroom tomorrow Linda Evans

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Five top tips

1. Think about when, why and how you ask questions.

2. Plan questions that promote higher-order thinking.

3. Respond thoughtfully to pupils’ answers 4. Teach pupils to ask questions5. Use techniques such as ‘If this is the answer,

what is the question?’

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1a. When? Why? How?Most questions are asked when a teacher is settling down the class (class management), recapping (testing memory) and checking understanding of instructions and concepts etc (but in a limited way).

“Pose, pause and pounce" (no hands up) to get everyone thinking (individualwhiteboards for short responses).Think about incorporating: o Thinking timeo Talking partners (model the process) ando Making sure verbal responses are audible.

There is a place for closed, low-level questions but your most able pupil maybe ‘switched off’ if there are too many!Instead, think about: o Philosophical inquiry and social learning (e.g.Belle Wallace’s TASC)o Creating an environment where being right doesn't always mattero Encouraging ‘risk-taking’.

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1b. Using questions for AfL

o What did you do this lesson/series of lessons?o What did you learn (i.e. you didn’t know before)?o What did you like about the lesson/why?o What did you not like/why?o What did you find most challenging/what made

you really think?o What would you do differently next time?

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2a. Good questions encourage pupils to ‘think hard’

Think aloud

Offer opinions

Speculate

Reason

Discuss

Reflect

Good questions

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2b. Framing good questionso Discussion/speculation: Do you agree - why? Is there a

different way? What would happen if…? What other possibilities are there? How does this link to ..?

o Reasoning and problem solving: What strategies/ materials/ tools can you use? What do you know/need to know? Who can help? What are the alternatives? What are the consequences?

o Reflection: How do you know? Why do you think that? Can you explain how…? What went well/could have gone better? How will you use what you have learned?

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2c. Bloom’s taxonomy

o Knowledge (remembering)o Understandingo Applyingo Analysingo Evaluating o Synthesising/ creating

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2d. Aide-memoire for HOTS o Analyse: breaking down information into component parts: making

inferences; finding evidence e.g.Why do you think …? What conclusions can you draw? How would you categorise …? What is the function of …? What motive could there have been to ?

o Evaluate: making comparisons, judgments and recommendations on the basis of established criteria e.g.What is your opinion of …? Would it be better if …? How would you justify …? How would you compare …? How would you prove that …?

o Synthesise: creating new information, plans and ideas from previous learning e.g. What would happen if …? How could you change …? What facts can you compile? Can you predict the outcome of …? How could you estimate the result of…?

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2e. Planning worthwhile questions

Good questions need to be planned.

o Lesson planso Subject department /phase meetingso Challenge cardso Question corners

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3a. Teachers responding to pupils

o Time o Modelling behaviour we want to nurture:

o Praise pupil questions that are well worded, unusual, interesting, challenging or that indicate reflection

o Respond to a wrong, ‘stupid’ or unwelcome contribution by inviting the speaker to think harder while you move to someone else. (Explore the reasons for the response given, if you think it may be based on a misunderstanding or a related line of thought). Urge the rest of the class to produce more thoughtful responses (i.e. valuing thought rather than devaluing a ‘mistaken’ contribution).

o Teacher confidence

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3b. Extending pupils’ answersQuestions should not stop once a question has been asked: draw on a repertoire of probing questions to extend pupils’ thinking. o Can you say a little more about that?o Why do you think that?o Can you explain how/why ?o Why did you decide to start like that/ do it that way/ include that…..?o How did you reach that answer/ decision ? How can you be sure?o What if…?o Who thinks something different?o Can you justify, give reasons why /evidence for /examples of ..?o Who can argue against…?o What do you think happens next?o How does this connect to…o Who would like to add to or ask a question about what has just been said?

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4a. Students asking questions

‘Asking good questions is the basis for becoming a successful learner.’ Guy Claxton

o An ability to formulate questions is valuable - encouraging an analytical approach and developing communication skills

o Beginning a lesson or topic by asking, ‘what questions could we ask about X … what would you like to know, how many questions can you ask?’ encourages curiosity and gives pupils more ownership of their learning.

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4b. How many questions can you ask?One mixed Y5/6 class came up with the following list of questions about Mexico:o Where is it? Is it an island or do other places join up to it?o What are the people like, what language do they speak? Do they speak English?o Can you go there on holiday? How long does it take? How much does it cost?o What’s the weather like?o What money do they use?o Do they grow stuff? Do they make stuff?o Is it a rich country or poor country?o Who is in charge? Is there a queen or a president? Etc.

Encouraged to think further, the children generated questions such as : o How is it different to living in this country? Is it nicer or worse?o Would we like to go on holiday there? Why/why not?o Why are there so many poor people?o If we had a million pounds to spend what would be the best way to help them?

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4c. Encouraging pupils to formulate questionso Pupils create a quiz at the end of a topic o Award marks for the quality of a question (older

pupils can assess this by identifying the HOTS involved in a good answer)

o Hot seating and interviewingo Devising a ‘question of the week’o ‘Mantle of the Expert’o Playing ‘Twenty questions’o Designing crosswords

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4d. Questions to develop metacognition and independenceo What am I trying to do?o What is my goal/ success criteria?o What information do I have?o What do I need to find out/do?o How will I do this? Who can help me?o What are the priorities/key points?o What is my plan?o Did I do as well as I could?o How can I use what I’ve learned?

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5. What’s the question?

Y9 Biology class A: ‘It gets smaller’ Q: It’s what happens when an ice cube melts … your iris in the dark…a dog

when it’s scared (but no… it just looks as if it does).. etc. etc.‘The answer should have been ‘it gets bigger’ because biology is all about growth’.

The ‘answers’ can be diverse – fitting with any subject area:o 1000o Greeno Oxygen o Waro Religion Consider too, approaches like PMI, ‘What if?’, P4C and De Bono’s strategies

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In summary

In ensuring outstanding provision in everyday lessons for your able, gifted and outstanding learners …1. Nurture a ‘community of enquiry’ (model).2. Plan challenging questions (HOTS).3. Encourage broader/deeper responses to questions

(exercise for the brain) and praise well-considered answers.

4. Teach them to ask questions of their own.5. Develop a bank of questioning techniques and

resources.