Ask the Right Questions
Help your students learn to use the information they already have to problem-solve in new situations. Do this by asking questions.
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- What can you do about that?
- Do you have some other ideas?
- What could you substitute for that?
- Do you see any advantages or disadvantages?
- When is the best time to do it?
- Where is the best place to do it?
- Who can we ask?
- What do we need to do first?
- What’s likely to happen if we do that?
- What happened when you tried that?
- Do you have an idea why that happened?
- Could we test that idea with an experiment?
- How will we know if that works?
- How will we know that’s true?
- Where could we find more information?
- Why do you think that?
- Is that always true?
- Tell me more.
- Let’s think of an example.
- Can you explain that a little more?
- Could we break this big problem into smaller pieces?
- Do you think your idea is different from his? How?
- How is your idea the same as hers?
- Could you convince him to do that? What would you say?
After You Ask, Listen Carefully!
Questions are doorways to exploration, not a chance to test, negate, or judge. By helping the student use logic and reasoning, then giving thoughtful positive feedback, you can help them soar!
by Yvonna Graham, M.Ed.
www.dyslexiakit.net
@GrahamYvonna