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Peer reviewedWilen, William W. – Social Studies, 2001
Explores nine myths about questioning techniques for teachers in social studies, such as questioning does not require planning, higher-level cognitive questions elicit higher-level answers, and teachers give students enough time to answer. Offers an alternative, with a description of its application, to each myth. (CMK)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Practices, Junior High Schools, Questioning Techniques
Black, Paul; Harrison, Christine; Lee, Clare; Marshall, Bethan; Wiliam, Dylan – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
In their widely read article "Inside the Black Box," the authors demonstrated that improving formative assessment raises student achievement. Now in this article, they and their colleagues report on a follow-up project that has helped teachers change their practice and students change their behavior so that everyone shares responsibility…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Grading
Boyd, Maureen; Rubin, Don – Journal of Literacy Research, 2006
Research on traditional classrooms paints a picture of teachers controlling talk patterns and of students producing minimal amounts of mainly procedural talk, recitation-type talk, or both. Often this bleak state of affairs is attributed to teachers' overreliance on inauthentic display questions--questions that impose tight thematic control and…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Elementary Education, Questioning Techniques, Teaching Methods
Porter, Stephen R. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2004
This chapter describes the different types of paper and electronic surveys currently available and their costs and benefits in terms of equipment and printing costs, demands on staff time, and ease of use.
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Mail Surveys, Economic Impact, Equipment Evaluation
Wells, Gordon; Arauz, Rebeca Mejia – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2006
There is increasing agreement among those who study classrooms that learning is likely to be most effective when students are actively involved in the dialogic coconstruction of meaning about topics that are of significance to them. This article reports the results of an extended collaborative action research project in which teachers attempted to…
Descriptors: Action Research, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Inquiry, Questioning Techniques
Carlton, Kevin; Nicholls, Mike; Ponsonby, David – Journal of Biological Education, 2004
Some aspects of biology, for example the Hardy-Weinberg simulation of population genetics or modelling heat flow in lizards, have an undeniable mathematical basis. Students can find the level of mathematical skill required to deal with such concepts to be an insurmountable hurdle to understanding. If not used effectively, spreadsheet models…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Genetics, Biology, Science Instruction
Kosygina, Larisa V. – Qualitative Report, 2005
The idea that all stages of social research are gendered has been discussed extensively in the literature. A great number of texts are devoted to reflection how gender influence researcher/respondent interaction. In this article, the author presents reflection on discrepancies between her interviews with men and women conducted within the research…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Researchers, Reflection, Experimenter Characteristics
Thorp, Carmany – Understanding Our Gifted, 2005
The belief that one can make a difference in the world drives the whole achievement process. Developing skills or using one's talents for a task deemed valuable becomes the basis of defining oneself as a person. That's why the good parent or coach or teacher knows how to make the appropriate compliment--and ask the right questions. This article…
Descriptors: Gifted, Academic Achievement, Beliefs, Student Attitudes
Mamona-Downs, Joanna; Downs, Martin – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2005
This paper raises issues motivated by considering the "identity" of problem solving. This means that we are concerned with how other mathematics education topics impinge on problem solving, and with themes that naturally arise within the problem-solving agenda. We claim that some of these issues need more attention by educational research, while…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Research, Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction
Doughty, Howard A. – College Quarterly, 2006
This article explores four kinds of critical thinking. The first is found in Socratic dialogues, which employ critical thinking mainly to reveal logical fallacies in common opinions, thus cleansing superior minds of error and leaving philosophers free to contemplate universal verities. The second is critical interpretation (hermeneutics) which…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Hermeneutics, Ideology, Critical Thinking
Parette, Phil; Huer, Mary Blake; Hourcade, Jack J. – Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 2003
While numerous approaches exist to gather information from families having cultural and linguistically diverse backgrounds and who have children with developmental disabilities, the use of assistive technology (AT) focus groups holds great promise for professionals. This article provides an overview of a process that can be implemented in school…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Developmental Disabilities, Educational Technology, Assistive Technology
Caney, Annaliese – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2004
Facilitating mental computation discussion comes with its own set of challenges for researchers and teachers. It is important to be able to help capture the students' ideas, before they disappear and seem like little more than moments of magic! In enabling children to learn how numbers work, the current emphasis on mental computation is driven by…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Testing, Mental Computation, Teachers
Rowe, Mary Budd – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2003
Part One of this paper summarizes six years of investigations devoted to the study of the influence that a variable called teacher "wait-time" has on development of language and logic in children taking part in elementary science programs. It discusses the relation of wait-time to 10 outcome variables. Wait time at two locations was studied in…
Descriptors: Science Programs, Rewards, Investigations, Elementary School Science
McGinty, Dixie – Educational Forum, The, 2006
In this reflective essay, the author describes her continuing search for a pedagogical path. She explains how she came to reject authoritative answers and packaged educational ideologies, and describes the questions that have unfolded for her about her own teaching. In closing, she writes about her search for a faith--a set of principles to guide…
Descriptors: Ideology, Educational Principles, Reflective Teaching, Teaching Styles
Bintz, William P.; Williams, Lynne – Middle School Journal (J3), 2005
Asking questions is a powerful way for students to learn. They use questions as a "pathway to wandering and wondering" and as a tool to turn confusing curriculum into meaningful learning. In this way, "student generated questions may lead to more demanding study, particularly when the prescribed curriculum is too often preoccupied with answers to…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Reading Teachers, Research Projects, Questioning Techniques

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