Excitement is building in this primary class around inquiry
learning. The students are learning, studying, researching and asking questions
about animals. They are working in small groups, building their understanding
and learning deeply about their topic of interest. Talking and thinking
together is helping them to make new and better meaning. This actually leads me
to bullet number 4 from the list Inquiry
Approach VS Coverage Approach posted on our website (Stephanie Harvey and
Harvey Daniels 2009)...
Strategic Thinking
VS Memorization
Students in this classroom are developing their critical
thinking skills by working on projects that are authentic and kid-driven. Ms. Parent fosters
curiosity and encourages students to think, talk and collaborate.
Teacher models, models, models! |
She began this process by teaching the students how to talk
and turn. She explicitly taught them how to read non-fiction text and gather
information with a variety of lessons, read alouds and teaching small group with
guided inquiries. One lesson taught students how to track their thinking.
This
process took time but once Ms. Parent felt they had the skills, strategies and understanding for learning and working in small groups,
the inquiry began!
Creating guidelines |
Tracking our thinking |
Students picked an animal to research and groups were
created. The first step into the inquiry was to work on a question chart –
What I Know/ Questions I have.
What I Know/ Questions I have.
More to follow…
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