essential questions
TRANSCRIPT
E s s e n t ia l q u e s t io n s‘Essential questions allow us to explore what knowledge is, how it came to be, and how it
has changed through human history.’-www.galileo.org
C r e a t in g E s s e n t ia l q u e s t io n s
Your enquiry will only be as good as the essential questions that you can devise to guide your study, so you must create ‘great’ essential questions!
These essential questions are what will form the backbone of what you research, so quite a bit of thought needs to go into forming them.
B e f o r e y o u s t a r t One very good place to start when
devising questions is to consider what you already know.
By asking yourself what you know, you can start thinking about what you want to find out.
Use Inspiration or similar to brainstorm what you already know about your allocated/chosen topic
H o w t o s t a r t …
First and foremost, your questions must be ones that you don’t know the answer to!
Otherwise, you will spend a lot of time researching something that you already know, and what is the point of that?
Make your questions open-ended, so they don’t have simple ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answers. This will force you to research deeper into a subject.
Your questions need to have meaning: either to you, and/ or to the ‘real world’, so you have a reason to do the research in the first place.
Make sure that you are researching something that you are interested in!
Aim to create questions that will allow you to analyse, evaluate and synthesise, which are higher level thinking skills, rather than just based on comprehension or application, which are lower level thinking skills.
Following information adapted from http://www.iwebquest.com/webquestcourse/question.htm
S k i l l s a n d q u e s t io n c u e s
A n a ly s is : seeing patterns, organisation of parts, recognitionof hidden meanings and identification of components
Question Cues:analyse, separate, order, explain, connect, classify,
arrange, divide, compare, select, explain, infer
Example Question: Can you explain why Latin died out and the effect on
other languages?
S y n t h e s is :use old ideas to create new ones, generalize from
given facts, relate knowledge from several areas, predict, draw conclusions
Question Cues:combine, integrate, modify, rearrange, substitute,
plan, create, design, invent, compose, formulate, prepare, generalise, rewrite
Example Question: Can you use your knowledge of the language to predict its future evolution?
E v a lu a t io n : compare and discriminate between ideas, assess
value of theories, make choices based on reasoned argument, verify value of evidence, recognise subjectivity
Question Cues:assess, decide, rank, measure, recommend, convince,
select, judge, explain, discriminate, support, conclude, compare, summarise
Example Question: Compare two or more great writers to determine which
you think had the greatest impact on their audience.
T o le a r n m o r e …
Go to the site:http://www.iwebquest.com/webquestcourse/question.htmAt the bottom of the page are a range of
website links to discover more about essential questions.