Designing critical inquiry units for a thinking classroom: Part 2
Transcription
Designing critical inquiry units for a thinking classroom: Part 2
Designing critical inquiry units for a thinking classroom: Part 2 Roland Case, Ph.D. Executive Director The Critical Thinking Consortium Talmud Torah Elementary School January 21, 2015 French / Judaic studies Menu of items (French / Judaic studies) § Your questions, concerns and successes § Three approaches to teaching vocabulary § Sample essential questions and tasks § Recognizing inquiry questions: card sort § TC2 French resources § Framing inquiry questions using the prompts § Consultation time Approaches to teaching vocabulary Approaches Explanation Memorization Teacher introduces word and its definition, and students are expected to learn and remember the word for use in a subsequent activity. Embedded exposure Teacher creates multiple opportunities to see and use words in meaningful contexts. Students learn the word through absorption and ongoing use. Discovery Teacher creates a situation where students have to figure out the meaning of the word for themselves. Tweaking memorization activities Decide on the best way for you to learn a word or set of words Create your own clue to help you remember Tweaking “embedded exposure” activities § Create a story using words from the vocabulary list that explains the story presented in the series of pictures Is the pharaoh kind or fearful? Explain the text or image Evidence from the text or image WHY have they done the actions? WHEN did the actions take place? WHERE do the actions take place? WHAT have they doing? WHO are the main figures in the text? Conclusions/interpretation Questions we have: Use sentence frames: Qu’est . . . Ou est les personnnes .. Embedding inquiry into “discovery” activities Complete the sentence by making informed guesses: When I first felt a pain in my , I thought perhaps I had ; but as I picked up my pace, I realized it was simply a passing . What criteria/factors did you use to decide upon a answer? Correct part of speech Sense within the sentence Consistency with other sentences Match with context or title Create a definition for a “memory” based on examples and non-examples Example of a memory Not a memory Example of a memory Not a memory Other examples of “discovery” § Mystery word charades § Match the labels with the pictures based on clues (cold, warm, freezing; father mother, brother) § Find the two errors in the sentence based on clues § Select the best image to communicate a word Inquiry units Essential question: Can I learn to use French/ Hebrew to explain everyday life? Critical tasks: Create a five-sentence weather report without prompts (today, yesterday tomorrow, temperature) Order a meal and take an order entirely in French. Explain to your friend everything you did yesterday entirely in Hebrew Invent and teach a (engaging, simple, and beneficial game that everyone can play) Essential question: Can I learn to read pictures entirely in French/ Hebrew? Critical task: Create a 5W’s account of any picture drawn from an assigned Biblical story/ book Card sort Contrasting kinds of questions Why response Thinking expectations Correct answers Locus of inquiry Typical question frame Ket task #1 #2 #3 Locating facts Find out or remember Describing feelings Offer a personal statement or preference Making assessment Render an assessment 5W is/does . . . ? Do you like . . . ? How would you feel . . . ? Should we . . . ? What is the most plausible . . .? The answer exists somewhere in a text, notes, memory (direct answer) The answer lies within the individual (individual answer) The answer must be thought through Typically a single correct answer Typically no wrong answers Primarily requires retrieval or recollection May require some introspection into personal feelings Typically more than one plausible answer and some answers are implausible or wrong Requires judging merits in light of criteria Why did Fred do this? Why do you believe this? (Reports on source of evidence Why do you feel this way? (offers a explanation for feelings or though pro Why do you think this option is more plausible? (Justifies the merits of the selected choice