How to write thoughtful questions!

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Presentation transcript:

How to write thoughtful questions! The Value of Questions How to write thoughtful questions!

Video What seem to be the rules of the game? What does the game show about the value of questions?

Why is it important to know how to develop thought-provoking questions? To keep a dialogue going (with others and with a text) To help point out what is important and why it is important in a text or topic To see connections between different parts and how they fit together To better understand what question and prompts are asking To stimulate critical thinking

Level 1 Questions Defining Describing Identifying Listing Naming Observing Reciting Scanning

Level 1 Questions What is the definition of “indigenous”? (definition) Who is the narrator of To Kill a Mockingbird? (identification) What characters appear in chapter 1 of To Kill a Mockingbird? (list)

Level 2 Questions Analyzing Comparing Contrasting Grouping Inferring Sequencing Synthesizing What words should be defined?

Level 2 Questions Analyze: to examine in detail to explain or interpret Infer: to deduce or conclude from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements Synthesize: to combine two or more things into a coherent whole

Level 2 Questions How does Rainsford’s interaction with Zaroff reveal his sense of morality? (analysis) If To Kill a Mockingbird is partly inspired by the Scottsboro Boys, what do you think will happen in the story? (inference) How do Rainsford and Zaroff differ in their attitudes toward hunting? (contrast)

Level 3 Questions Applying a principle Evaluating Hypothesizing Predicting Judging Speculating Imagining What words should be defined?

Level 3 Questions Principle: a fundamental truth or proposition that serves as the foundation for a system of belief or behavior or for a chain of reasoning Evaluate: to determine the worth or value of something Hypothesize: to make a tentative assumption in order to test it

Level 3 Questions 4) Judge: to form an opinion or conclusion after careful weighing of evidence and testing of premises 5) Predict: to foretell on the basis of observation or experience 6) Speculate: to form a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence

Level 3 Questions Are any of the characters in “The Most Dangerous Game” moral? (Judgment) What do you think happens to Rainsford when he wakes up after killing Zaroff? (Speculation)

Determine the level of the following questions about Chapter 1 of TKAM Who is telling the story? Why do you think the story is being told? What are the effects on the story from having it told from a child’s point of view? Level 1 (identifying) Level 3 (speculating) Level 2 (inferring)

Determine the level of the following questions about Chapter 1 of TKAM Why does the author make an allusion to FDR’s Inaugural speech in the first chapter? When Dill first meets Scout and Jem, he says, “’I’m Charles Baker Harris,’ he said. ‘I can read.’” What is the significance of such an introduction? Level 2 (inferring) Level 3 (evaluating)

Determine the level of the following questions about Chapter 1 of TKAM The author uses imagery to describe the Radley house. What might this description foreshadow? Explain your answer. Level 3 (predicting)

Your turn to develop questions for Chapter 2!