The pressure
of finding quality “Time” seems to be causing
concern among the teachers involved in establishing inquiry learning in the
classroom. While the grade one
students happily explore, their teacher worries about the length of time it’s
taking for them to work through the process.
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Grade 1 Investigation |
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Adding Detail |
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Adding Information |
How do teachers find the time to allow for learning
in depth? How do we juggle authentic investigations while meeting the demands
of curriculum? Let’s take a look at bullet number 5 listed from our
website under the Inquiry Approach VS Coverage Approach chart (Harvey & Daniels, 2009).
Authentic
Investigation VS As/If Surrogate Learning
Integrating curriculum into authentic investigations might be
one way to help with
time constraints. This week, we worked with our grade 5/6 students to develop background knowledge on “Black History” month, this resulted with students asking a
variety of questions.
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Questions from students |
As we introduce the topics of
slavery, abolition, segregation and civil rights, the students will work
in teams of 4 or 5. These topics will support
Social Studies and the
Language curriculum expectations through a variety of activities. During the mini-inquiry, we encourage
students to ask questions, rather than have the teacher ask questions and expect them to supply the answers. As we work through this
process the students will be rotating through workstations. This step helps to develop curiosity and interest in a topic. Next, the students will dig deep, investigate the topics and questions that matter to
them.
How do you encourage authentic investigation in your class? Is finding
'time' to learn deeply an issue? Please join this discussion by sending your comment below!
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