essential questions
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
What Are They and How Do You
Write Them?
By Mary Alice Osborne, the “Facing History and Ourselves Team,” and
Linda Foote
Essential Question
s
What is an Essential Question?
Students have to think critically to answer an essential question. Instead of simply looking up answers, they conduct research and create original answers.
Provokes Deep Thought
An Essential Question:
An Essential Question:
Solicits information-gathering and evaluation of data
An Essential Question:
Encourages students to produce original ideas rather than predetermined answers
An Essential Question:
Helps students conduct problem-related research
An Essential Question:
May not have an answer
An Essential Question:
Encourages critical thinking, not just memorization of facts
Think: Bloom’s Taxonomy
Who’s Doing the Learning?
Some Examples: NOT Essential: What is it like to live in Hong Kong Essential: Which city in Southeast Asia is the best place to
live?
NOT Essential: What is AIDS? Essential: Which serious disease most deserves research
funding?
NOT Essential: When was the Declaration of Independence signed?
Essential: What ideas in the Declaration of Independence have become American traditions?
“What If” Questions:
What if the Cultural Revolution had never happened?
What if students didn’t have to go to school?
“Should Questions”A Moral or Practical Decision based on Evidence
Should we clone humans?
Should we discontinue trade with countries that abuse human rights?
Should Wilbur run for freedom?
“Why Questions:Understand Cause and Effect
Why do people abuse drugs?
Why is the death rate higher in one Third World country than another?
Traits of Essential Questions:
Open ended: not usually answered with a simple yes or no, or right answer.
Made explicit to students: referred to often during units
Deliberately framed to engage students Connect to students’ lives and past, present, or
future experiences Used to design curriculum. Activities and materials
should be selected based on how they help students explore the essential questions of the unit.
Essential Questions in History What choices do people make in the face of injustice? What makes it possible for neighbor to turn against neighbor? How are genocide and other acts of mass violence humanly
possible? What choices do people make that allow collective violence to
happen? Who decides how laws or rules are applied? How can we ensure
that laws and rules are applied to everyone in the same way? What are civil rights? Who decides? How can we respond when our
civil rights are violated? What can be done to strengthen the civil rights of individuals and groups?
What is race? How can ideas about race be used and abused? What can be done to counter harmful myths about race?
How have ideas about race been used to decide who is included and who is excluded?
Copyright © 2011 Facing History and Ourselves. All rights reserved.
Examples of Open Ended Questions How would you…? What would result if…? How would you describe…? How does…compare with…? What is the relationship between…? What would happen if…? How could you change…? How would you improve…? How do you feel about…? Why do you believe…? What is your opinion of…? What choice would you have made…? What would you do differently? Why do you feel…? How would you go about solving the problem…? If you were in this position what would you do? Why do you/don’t you support…? What could improve…?
Culture: Values Beliefs and Rituals How do individuals develop values and beliefs? What factors shape our values and beliefs? How do values and beliefs change over time? How does family play a role in shaping our values
and beliefs? Why do we need beliefs and values? What happens when belief systems of societies and
individuals come into conflict? When should an individual take a stand in opposition
to an individual or larger group? When is it appropriate to challenge the beliefs or
values of society? Are there universal characteristics of belief systems
that are common across people and time?
Social Justice Questions What is social justice? To what extent does power or the lack of power
affect individuals? What is oppression and what are the root causes? How are prejudice and bias created? How do we
overcome them? What are the responsibilities of the individual in
regard to issues of social justice? Can literature serve as a vehicle for social change? When should an individual take a stand against what
he/she believes to be an injustice? What are the most effective ways to do this?
What are the factors that create an imbalance of power within a culture?
Questioning Resources Asking Essential Questions
http://www.biopoint.com/ibr/askquestion.html
The Key to Understanding Essential Questionshttp://www.hannibal.cnyric.org/Acrobat%20docs/ESSENTIAL%20QUESTIONS%20For%20high%20School.pdf
Themes and Essential Questions: Framing Inquiry and Critical Thinking http://www.greece.k12.ny.us/instruction/ELA/6-12/Essential%20Questions/Index.htm
Asking Essential Questionshttp://www.il-tce.org/present04/flesser.pdf
Questioning Resources Asking Essential Questions
http://www.biopoint.com/ibr/askquestion.html
The Key to Understanding Essential Questionshttp://www.hannibal.cnyric.org/Acrobat%20docs/ESSENTIAL%20QUESTIONS%20For%20high%20School.pdf
Themes and Essential Questions: Framing Inquiry and Critical Thinking http://www.greece.k12.ny.us/instruction/ELA/6-12/Essential%20Questions/Index.htm
Asking Essential Questionshttp://www.il-tce.org/present04/flesser.pdf
Credits
Name Mary Alice OsborneLocation West Topsham, Vermont, United States
Work Teacher Librarian at King Abdullah University of Science and TechnologyAbout Libraries are changing rapidly due to the incredible information & communication opportunities that the Internet presents. I want to use the new ideas of "Web2.0" to help bring libraries forward to better serve their patrons.Website www.kslibrary.info
http://www.slideshare.net/maryaliceosborne/essential-questions-for-students