You are here

Disable VAT on Taiwan

Unfortunately, as of 1 January 2020 SAGE Ltd is no longer able to support sales of electronically supplied services to Taiwan customers that are not Taiwan VAT registered. We apologise for any inconvenience. For more information or to place a print-only order, please contact uk.customerservices@sagepub.co.uk.

Challenging Learning Through Questioning
Share
Share

Challenging Learning Through Questioning
Facilitating the Process of Effective Learning

Foreword by James Nottingham



August 2020 | 224 pages | Corwin

Better questioning for better learning

Questioning is a process that sparks discussion and encourages deeper thinking. Effective questioning builds on students’ natural curiosity, moving them out of their comfort zone and into the learning zone in a purposeful, accessible way. It also models the process of good thinking and fosters a culture of high expectations.

Like any skill, questioning takes practice. With this insightful guide, you’ll reframe your thinking and fine-tune the three essential questioning skills—know your intent, plan your responses, and stay purposefully silent—to elicit noticeably improved responses from students. Features include

·         Questioning sequences that work in any discipline

·         Techniques for deepening learning through questioning

·         Organizational strategies for pair, small-group, and whole-class dialogues

·         Best practices for balancing questioning, thinking tools, and strategic silences

·         Exercises, activities, and review and reflection sections

High-quality questioning supports a culture in which students are not only challenged, but expect to be challenged, and where they flourish intellectually. Through your questioning, you’ll give them the tools they need to become thoughtful, confident, and independent learners.



 
List of Figures
 
The Challenging Learning Story
 
Foreword by James Nottingham
 
Preface
 
Acknowledgements
 
About the Author
 
The Language of Learning
 
Introduction
 
Part I: How to Question
 
Chapter 1: Questioning Essentials
1.0 The Three Essential Skills

 
1.1 Know Your Intent

 
1.2 Identifying Your Intent

 
1.3 Plan Your Responses

 
1.4 Stay Silent (and Listen)

 
1.5 Review

 
1.6 Reflection

 
 
Chapter 2: The Basic Questioning Sequence
2.0 The IRE Pattern

 
2.1 IRE as Closed Questioning

 
2.2 Problems in IRE

 
2.3 Rethinking the E

 
2.4 Using the Explore Step to Focus on Process

 
2.5 Challenge and the I-R-Explore Pattern

 
2.6 Questioning as Feedback

 
2.7 Review

 
2.8 Reflection

 
 
Chapter 3: Questioning Tools: Planning Effective Sequences
3.0 The Starting Point: Initiate—Where Questions Are Born

 
3.1 A Reflection Section

 
3.2 Your Options After the First Response: Planning With a Flow Chart

 
3.3 Planning to Explore: Stick With It!

 
3.4 Planning Questioning Sequences: The Funnelling Technique

 
3.5 Using the Funnelling Technique to Plan Longer Sequences

 
3.6 So Why Don't We Explore More?

 
3.7 Prompted to Explore!

 
3.8 Review

 
3.9 Reflection

 
 
Chapter 4: Questioning Flow
4.0 Pause and Paraphrase to Improve Flow

 
4.1 A Reflection Section

 
4.2 Paraphrasing

 
4.3 Getting in Flow

 
4.4 It’s Not About Giving Up Control!

 
4.5 Managing Questioning Sequences in Whole-Class Dialogues: Get the IDEAR!

 
4.6 Questioning Moves in the IDEAR Framework

 
4.7 A Questioning Example in the IDEAR Framework

 
4.8 Impact of the IDEAR Framework

 
4.9 Review

 
4.10 Reflection

 
 
Chapter 5: Stay Silent (and Listen)
5.0 Less Time to Process Means Less Impact

 
5.1 Wait-Time

 
5.2 Think-Time

 
5.3 Think-Pair-Share

 
5.4 Don’t Forget Think-Time 2!

 
5.5 A Taxonomy of Classroom Silences

 
5.6 The Skilful Use of Silences in Effective Questioning Sequences

 
5.7 Review

 
5.8 Reflection

 
 
Part II: Questioning and Challenge
 
Chapter 6: Thinking About Challenge
6.0 The Benefit of Struggle

 
6.1 How to Think About Challenge in Learning

 
6.2 Questioning to Encourage and Support Struggle

 
6.3 Know Your Intent: Get Into the Learning Zone!

 
6.4 The Learning Pit

 
6.5 The Learning Challenge Stages

 
6.6 Review

 
6.7 Reflection

 
 
Chapter 7: Questioning Activities to Challenge Thinking
7.0 Ranking Exercises

 
7.1 Diamond Nine

 
7.2 Extending Thinking With The Intention to Challenge

 
7.3 Your Role During the Groupwork Stage

 
7.4 Varying the Groupwork to Share Perceptions

 
7.5 Example Diamond Nine Cards for Different Age Groups

 
7.6 Other Shapes for Ranking

 
7.7 Review

 
7.8 Reflection

 
 
Chapter 8: Questioning for Challenge
8.0 Getting Into the Pit!

 
8.1 Intention to Challenge 1: The Counter-Example

 
8.2 Intention to Challenge 2: Comparisons

 
8.3 Intention to Challenge 3: Challenge Assumptions

 
8.4 Intention to Challenge 4: Define Extent

 
8.5 Advanced Questioning Techniques for Increasing Challenge

 
8.6 The Role of the Questioner: Teacher Stances When Questioning for Challenge

 
8.7 Time to Think When Questioning for Challenge

 
8.8 Review

 
8.9 Reflection

 
 
Part III: Students and Questioning
 
Chapter 9: Students Learning to Ask Questions
9.0 Question Stems

 
9.1 The Question Constructor

 
9.2 5 Ws (and an H!)

 
9.3 Inference Squares

 
9.4 Students Classifying Their Own Questions for Inquiry

 
9.5 Review

 
9.6 Reflection

 
 
Example Questioning Scripts
 
Final Reflections
 
10 Top Tips for Questioning
 
References
 
Index

"James Nottingham’s work on Challenging Learning is a critical element of creating Visible Learners. This new series will help teachers hone the necessary pedagogical skills of dialogue, feedback, questioning, and mindset. There’s no better resource to encourage all learners to know and maximize their impact!"

John Hattie, Professor & Director, Melbourne Education Research Institute
University of Melbourne

For instructors

Please contact your Academic Consultant to check inspection copy availability for your course.

Select a Purchasing Option

ISBN: 9781506376578
£30.99