Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Chapter 5 why ask?
The first thing in the chapter that really struck me was when the author was talking about the way teachers ask questions. The author was going on and on about how important the way you ask questions are to facilitate learning and in my head I'm thinking, "stop beating the horse". Then I read the phrase, "However, in organizing lessons, teachers are inclined to plan thinking activities where the learners; potential to question the text is diminished because the teacher dominates the questioning". I paused and thought about this for a second. That has been absolutely true from the time I began school until I graduated highschool. It was not until college that I began to start thinking as an individual and questioning things. Before then I just thought about what the teacher wanted me to tell her so I can get an A. So once I made it to college, I am required to think and argue. I can remember in my politics class when my teacher asked the class the write a paper arguing a point. I still wrote what I thought he wanted to hear or what I thought he wanted in order to get an A. Reading through these strategies really helped me understand how I can teach students to become better thinkers and how to question things they normally wouldn't think about questioning.
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