“What do
you think?” For most students, there is no question more enervating than this
one. In reality, Fernando is thinking about Natalia’s rear end, Leticia is
thinking about red shoes, and Amelia is wondering if her hair should really be
so pink. The teacher is referring to the North Pole, to a week in the desert,
to a flight to outer space. “What do you think?” Think what?!
Let’s get
more specific. Look at the paragraph on page 94. “Most people start a diet on
the first day of the week.” So, asks the teacher, on what day did Mary probably
start her weight-loss program? Monday, teacher. Great! Is that enough thinking
for the day? How many minutes are left in this class, anyway…..
Is it hot
or cold in the Amazon? Hot, teacher. Is Florida north of the equator; yes or
no? Yes, teacher. What do you think about the architecture in Brasilia? Think
what?
Questions
that are too broad or too narrow are really a dead-end with regard to inducing
extensive thinking or communicating. “Thinking” is usually best fueled by
substance, in the form of reasoning, figuring out, relating to experience. For
example, among the classes which are a requirement for people wanting to obtain
a driver’s license, there is one session devoted to small-group discussion of
contentious traffic situations described
by the teacher on printed handouts. In this case, “what do you think” sparks a
heated exchange between persons who have experience these or similar
situations, who know others who also have, whose speculations and opinions are
percolating with reciprocal mental energy in the buildup of accelerating
reactions among the participants. This is thinking.
Yes/No
questions, queries which ask for a fact or statistic, all have their place in
classroom work, in the daily constructs of communication. But they do not
usually result in the extent or complexity of thought – hopefully, expression –
which the teacher has in mind when he envisions students in the process of
interested reaction to stimulation of thought. Some questions inspire furtive,
repeated attention to the movement of the minute hand on the clock on the wall.
On the other hand, effective thought-provoking strategies can open up fields of
mental/verbal exploration that will result in looks of surprise and slight
frustration when the bell rings. Already, teacher?
Katy Cox |
That's so true!! I could picture myself asking my fourteen-year-old son about his school day... "And then, how were classes at school this morning?" "Normal." Answers are usually as short as that if he's not challenged.
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