Saturday, October 23, 2010

Essential Questions

As I read the chapter “Essential Questions: Doorways to Understanding”  I realized that many educators I know have an erroneous understanding of what essential questions are and how to use them.  For instance, I can remember the middle school principal I worked with encouraging me to post essential questions on my board.  I didn’t know what they were, and he explained them as what you want the students to get out of the lesson, that is the objectives, posed in question form.  So my initial forays into composing essential questions looked something like “How do we use semicolons?”  Where is the opportunity for intense inquiry in that?.
All of us have some line of inquiry, some essential questions, that we haven’t answered yet.  For example, one of mine might be “What teaching methods and practices will most engage my students and enable them to leave my class, as our school’s mission statement promises, a ‘knowledgeable, thinking, responsible, Jewish adult’?”  In posing essential questions of this type, we teach our student that “education is not just about learning ‘the answer’ but about learning how to learn” (108).  In our culture, we often nail politicians for “waffling” when they change their minds about something.  If we were really teaching our students how to think, as adults they might realize that “we are likely to change our minds in response to reflection and experience concerning such questions as we go through life, and changes of mind are not only expected but beneficial” (108).
This chapter ends with a bang in terms of thought provoking ideas.  “Our students need a curriculum that treats them more like potential performers than sideline observers” (122).  Students describe school or classes as something to get through.  No wonder!  They  aren’t really often asked to participate in it, to use what they know or think about what they’re learning beyond regurgitating for a test!  I want my class to be a class that students will say is challenging and makes them think about things in new ways.  One quibble I have always had with RateMyTeachers.com and the similar RateMyProfessors.com is that one of their criteria for a good teacher is an easy class.  In what way do we learn anything, and therefore by extension can we say a teacher is good if we are only after an easy class, which really means an easy A?  Is that all we care about?  That grade?  Well, yes, it can be.  We have all been frustrated, I’m sure, at one time or another by hearing “Is this going to be on the test? Is this what you want?  How long does the paper have to be?” (122).  What we need to do, then, is step back and see whether we have created a class based on “an unending stream of leading questions” (122).
We sometimes send students the message that getting through the content is more important than their own questions.  We have trained students that not to know something and be curious about it is risky.
The thought that struck me as I finished the chapter is that students learn in spiteof school too often, and not because of school.

7 comments:

  1. yes, I agree with you on the fact that we care about the content and we don´t allow students to think beyond, they really need to be curious and take risks in order to learn more.

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  2. I think that it is easy to confuse the "what" and the "how" of essential questions. There is a common misunderstanding that essential questions are just the lesson objectives rewarded in question forms. The chapter gives a clear explanation of it.

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  3. It is so common to see students frustrated because the questions they have seem to be unimportant and the teacher only wants to cover the contents. It happened to me when I was at school, sometimes I was afraid of asking something that could sound stupid or that wasn't related to the topic itself. It is very important to give our students the time to ask and to listen to them.
    Essential questions will help not only our students but also they will help us to conduct our lessons in a better way.

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  4. I agree with you in the sense that we have to students feel confident of asking whatever they want ... but ... sometimes some students ask really foolish questions. ( I don`t want to be bad)

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  5. I think you're totally right when you mention that many teachers have the wrong idea of what essential questions are and their purpose. It's good for us to think of this so we don't make the same mistake.

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  6. I thonk students most of the times get bored in our classes, because curricula don't allow them to think critically. They just do what ther are asked to do...
    And that's the very reason our students don't know how to ask and what to ask...
    It's time, for us as teachers, to create proposals to make a real change in order to create instances for participation and debate in our classrooms...

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  7. We ( teachers) need to reflect more on students´ understanding. Essential questions seem to be a way of stimulating deeper learning and critical thinking.

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