Questioning
Questioning
Alexander R (2017) Towards Dialogic Teaching: Rethinking Classroom Talk. 5th ed. Cambridge: Dialogos.
What does dialogic talk look like?
• Children share a common goal or purpose
• Children allow each other to speak
• Children ask questions in order to understand better
• Children paraphrase or reflect back each other’s words
• Children are prepared to express uncertainty or
tentativeness
• Children try to make their own point as clearly as possible
• Children explore differences of opinion
• Children give arguments to support their ideas
How to recognise dialogic teaching
• When observing effective dialogic teaching you
might expect to hear:
Doherty J (2018) Skilful questioning: The beating heart of good pedagogy”. The Profession, June 2018. Available online:
https://impact.chartered.college/article/doherty-skilful-questioning-beating-heart-good-pedagogy/
Paramore J (2017) Questioning to stimulate dialogue. In: Paige R, Lambert S, and Geeson R (eds) Building Skills for Effective Primary
Teaching. London: Learning Matters, pp. 125–142.
Student wait time (giving a brief period of time for
Pace and Timing students to think or reflect before answering) has a
positive effect on learning.
Brooks J and Brooks M (2001) Becoming a Constructive Teachers. Costa A (ed.). Developing Minds: A Resource Book for Teaching Thinking. Alexandria, VA: Ass.
Cohen L, Manion L and Morrison K (2004) A Guide to Teaching Practice. London: Routledge.
Bloom’s Taxonomy
Pupils need to have knowledge before they
can understand it and that they need to
understand it before they can apply it in
different contexts.
They need to be able to handle these "lower
order" skills (knowledge, comprehension,
application) before they can analyse and
criticise.
This is necessary before they can combine
different kinds of knowledge to create new
understandings, (synthesis) after which they
can then move on to evaluate, the "highest"
order.
Moving between these stages demands
increasingly complex thinking by the learner.
Bloom's is helpful when scaffolding
questions. If pupils cannot answer questions
of a specific type, the teacher can lower the
order to take them back to what they can do,
then build it up again.
White hat thinking
De Bono’s Thinking Hats What information do we have? What is missing? What do we need? How do
we get it? What has the land been used for previously? How many people live
there? How will the water be transported?
Black hat thinking
De Bono's "Thinking hats" approach is an effective Do the conclusions follow from the evidence? Is the claim justified? Will the
way of getting pupils to ask questions from a plan work? What are the dangers of the plan? Will there be sufficient
variety of perspectives, again allowing teachers to drainage? Is a leisure centre really needed here?
assess pupils' current level of thinking. Red hat thinking
Questions may include: What do I feel about that decision? Is my gut reaction
yes or no? Do I want a building in the middle of this area? Do I think this design
is too modern?
Yellow hat thinking
What are the benefits? Why? What are the good things about having a leisure
centre here?
Green hat thinking
Questions may include: What would we ideally wish for? What alternatives are
there? What else could we do with the space? What about an adventure park?
Or some futuristic green houses?
Blue hat thinking
Questions may include Where are we now? What is the next step? Is this the
best way to decide? Was this a good way to go about making the decision?
Planning for Questioning
• Planning key questions and embedding them early in lesson - often in the learning
objective is particularly effective. Record these in your schemes of work
• Clarify your learning intentions - link your key questions to them
• Plan a few key questions to use, perhaps collaboratively, or within your schemes of
work
• Extend the key questions with subsidiary questions to ask.
• Consider the techniques you will employ - e.g. asking the same child follow up
questions to probe understanding. Where will pupils need most "think time"?
• Analyse the answers you are given and decide on "follow-up" responses
• Make the questions a focus for recall
• Decide on the level and order/timing of questions. Stage them so that the level of
challenge increases as the lesson proceeds. Bloom's taxonomy is good for this.
Strategies to improve the distribution of
your questioning