Recent Posts
|
|
The Arts and UDL: What General Education Can Learn from the Margins
by Don Glass on April 12 |
|
|
Deeper Learning and the Common Core
by Robert Rothman on April 1 |
|
|
Universal Design for Learning and Improving Education for Incarcerated Youth
by Joanne Karger on March 20 |
|
|
The Power of Parents
by Michael Sadowski on March 4 |
|
|
Stand Up or Bystand? New Insights on Bullying
by Silvia Diazgranados Ferráns and Robert L. Selman on February 11 |
More from Harvard Education Publishing Group
- Nine Ways the Common Core Will Change Classroom Practice
- The Poverty Gap
- Teachers Writing It Their Way
In the summer of 2010, Newsweek pronounced—on its cover no less—that the United States was suffering from a “Creativity Crisis.” The coauthors of the cover story, Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman, quite ably synthesized cutting-edge research about how to create the conditions for promoting creativity and offered specific ideas on how to address the crisis.
Conventional wisdom, they reported, perceives creativity as emerging almost spontaneously from divergent thinking, that is, from the kind of thinking that can go off in many directions and generate new ideas. New research, however, has shown that creativity also requires convergent thinking, the ability to sharpen focus, to narrow down, to synthesize ideas and information. Schools, they argue, need to offer students opportunities to do both divergent and convergent thinking.
Add to these findings the new article from the Harvard Educational Review, in which Susan Engel from Williams College makes a compelling case for promoting greater curiosity in schools. She calls for a “shift in the way we see the traditional role of a teacher, from one who answers questions to one who elicits them.”
Eliciting questions from students is a noble goal. The ability to generate questions serves as a renewable source of intellectual energy that makes it possible for students to continuously inquire, explore, problem-solve and, indeed, create in setting after setting. But, far too few students learn to ask their own questions.
When my coauthor, Luz Santana, and I were writing Make Just One Change: Teach Students to Ask Their Own Questions, we were struck by just how hard teachers—on their own initiative—were already working to spark students’ curiosity and creativity. The teachers were spending hours, if not entire weekends, trying to figure out just the right question to stimulate students thinking, to set off a moment of great discovery, and to turn on all the light bulbs, even the ones that had grown dim over time. Adding this challenge to their already heavy load of daily tasks left them bone weary and, even worse, discouraged when their carefully crafted question turned on, at best, only one or two of the 20 to 30 light bulbs in the room.
The teachers kept asking students questions, but began to wonder if there was a better way to set off a spark of creative thinking in the classroom. They made it clear to us that they wanted an answer to this question: What is the simplest way to promote curiosity and creative thinking in any classroom?
In our work with the Right Question Institute, we developed, through a long process of trial and error, the Question Formulation Technique. We saw that teachers were able to take the Question Formulation Technique and quickly integrate it into their lesson plans. Teachers in vastly different communities, teaching on many levels, soon saw new sparks of curiosity and creativity set off by students learning to ask their own questions.
A teacher with 33 years in the classroom in a large urban high school noticed that by using the Question Formulation Technique when teaching a poem she taught for years, “the students asked questions that had never before been raised.” And a young teacher, early in her career, in a primary grade classroom in a small town, observed “my students amazed themselves, and me, by all that they figured out ‘just’ by learning to ask their own questions.”
For Hayley Dupuy, a sixth-grade science teacher in Palo Alto, CA, who uses the Question Formulation Technique in her classroom, the creative component seems fairly obvious: “There is inherent creativity in students asking their own questions…the process of having to think about one's own questions requires creative thinking.”
Savvy teachers like Dupuy are highly attuned to knowing quickly what works and what doesn’t work with their students. They don’t need that explained to them. But, in writing the book, we struggled with explaining why asking questions could have such a transformational effect.
The research cited in the Newsweek article helped us see that the Question Formulation Technique promotes both divergent and convergent thinking—exactly the two ingredients required to promote creativity. Teachers in urban as well as suburban and rural schools whose students had weak reading and writing skills demonstrated that their students became intellectually curious and moved to a very high level of creative thinking when they became adept at asking their own questions.
We also learned from teachers that when their students used another step in the process to name what they had learned, how they had learned it, and how they could apply what they learned, they often had creative breakthroughs in their understanding of ideas and materials. They had just used another invaluable ingredient for creative thinking, metacognition, and that catapulted them directly into the rarefied company of sophisticated thinkers. We took the exact same process and taught it to students well equipped with advanced reading and writing skills (such as students at various graduate schools at Harvard University, including the Law School and the School of Education), and they were struck by how they could more effectively produce their own questions, improve them, and strategize on how to use them.
Sometimes the challenges in education are so enormous that they demand complex solutions. But, the goal of sparking curiosity and creativity may be accomplished more simply and more directly, by teaching students how to ask their own questions.
Conventional wisdom, they reported, perceives creativity as emerging almost spontaneously from divergent thinking, that is, from the kind of thinking that can go off in many directions and generate new ideas. New research, however, has shown that creativity also requires convergent thinking, the ability to sharpen focus, to narrow down, to synthesize ideas and information. Schools, they argue, need to offer students opportunities to do both divergent and convergent thinking.
Add to these findings the new article from the Harvard Educational Review, in which Susan Engel from Williams College makes a compelling case for promoting greater curiosity in schools. She calls for a “shift in the way we see the traditional role of a teacher, from one who answers questions to one who elicits them.”
Eliciting questions from students is a noble goal. The ability to generate questions serves as a renewable source of intellectual energy that makes it possible for students to continuously inquire, explore, problem-solve and, indeed, create in setting after setting. But, far too few students learn to ask their own questions.
When my coauthor, Luz Santana, and I were writing Make Just One Change: Teach Students to Ask Their Own Questions, we were struck by just how hard teachers—on their own initiative—were already working to spark students’ curiosity and creativity. The teachers were spending hours, if not entire weekends, trying to figure out just the right question to stimulate students thinking, to set off a moment of great discovery, and to turn on all the light bulbs, even the ones that had grown dim over time. Adding this challenge to their already heavy load of daily tasks left them bone weary and, even worse, discouraged when their carefully crafted question turned on, at best, only one or two of the 20 to 30 light bulbs in the room.
The teachers kept asking students questions, but began to wonder if there was a better way to set off a spark of creative thinking in the classroom. They made it clear to us that they wanted an answer to this question: What is the simplest way to promote curiosity and creative thinking in any classroom?
In our work with the Right Question Institute, we developed, through a long process of trial and error, the Question Formulation Technique. We saw that teachers were able to take the Question Formulation Technique and quickly integrate it into their lesson plans. Teachers in vastly different communities, teaching on many levels, soon saw new sparks of curiosity and creativity set off by students learning to ask their own questions.
A teacher with 33 years in the classroom in a large urban high school noticed that by using the Question Formulation Technique when teaching a poem she taught for years, “the students asked questions that had never before been raised.” And a young teacher, early in her career, in a primary grade classroom in a small town, observed “my students amazed themselves, and me, by all that they figured out ‘just’ by learning to ask their own questions.”
For Hayley Dupuy, a sixth-grade science teacher in Palo Alto, CA, who uses the Question Formulation Technique in her classroom, the creative component seems fairly obvious: “There is inherent creativity in students asking their own questions…the process of having to think about one's own questions requires creative thinking.”
Savvy teachers like Dupuy are highly attuned to knowing quickly what works and what doesn’t work with their students. They don’t need that explained to them. But, in writing the book, we struggled with explaining why asking questions could have such a transformational effect.
The research cited in the Newsweek article helped us see that the Question Formulation Technique promotes both divergent and convergent thinking—exactly the two ingredients required to promote creativity. Teachers in urban as well as suburban and rural schools whose students had weak reading and writing skills demonstrated that their students became intellectually curious and moved to a very high level of creative thinking when they became adept at asking their own questions.
We also learned from teachers that when their students used another step in the process to name what they had learned, how they had learned it, and how they could apply what they learned, they often had creative breakthroughs in their understanding of ideas and materials. They had just used another invaluable ingredient for creative thinking, metacognition, and that catapulted them directly into the rarefied company of sophisticated thinkers. We took the exact same process and taught it to students well equipped with advanced reading and writing skills (such as students at various graduate schools at Harvard University, including the Law School and the School of Education), and they were struck by how they could more effectively produce their own questions, improve them, and strategize on how to use them.
Sometimes the challenges in education are so enormous that they demand complex solutions. But, the goal of sparking curiosity and creativity may be accomplished more simply and more directly, by teaching students how to ask their own questions.
Comments:
| Jan 15, 2012 05:09 PM |
Great post! Groups of three, working together in a virtual world, ask each other questions all the time and learn very fast and with joy.
– Roland Sassen |
| Jan 16, 2012 10:09 AM |
Thanks - great book I am adapting the protocol to use in workshops with teachers - often the most difficult audience to work with, and it really has made a difference.
– Rachel Porter |
| Jan 16, 2012 10:52 AM |
I really appreciate the concerns of the authors to spark curiosity & creativity among students. The ideas of RQI and importance of QFT seems to be interesting. But the words like "more effectively ..." - very confusing (may be my forty years of service as Teacher Educator is not sufficient); as I have seen a few teachers who can construct meaningful questions for themselves. Hope RQI, have the able faculty to ignite the younger minds. "Challenge" students ... rather than "Teach" students. Only skillful teachers can inspire and help students to frame questions of your focus. I am sorry I may be wrong also.
– Rao |
| Jan 17, 2012 12:42 AM |
It is one thing to ask teachers to ask students to ask questions, it is another to ensure those questions are respected and do not result in children being teased or ridiculed for a question. The teacher should also be a coach for clarification and support on questions, even for the most simplistic and outrageous questions.
The self security and ease of speaking in public comes easily to some students over others. How would shy students gain as much as more outgoing students using this technique? – Mark Lipski |
| Feb 2, 2012 01:41 PM |
I'm glad that students are asking questions, showing their curiosity. What is also important is to learn to ask the "right questions."
– Carol Morgan |
Submit your comment
The opinions expressed here do not reflect the opinions of the Harvard Education Publishing Group or the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Harvard Education Publishing Group is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by guest bloggers.

