Title: Enduring Understanding and Essential Questions in Inquiry Instruction
1Enduring Understanding and Essential Questions in
Inquiry Instruction
- Gretchen Lee- MRH 4th/5th
- g.lee_at_mrhsd.k12.mo.us
2What are we going to do today?
- Review characteristics of Inquiry instruction.
- Discuss how EUs and EQs frame the way we
plan/will plan learning activities? - Review process and considerations when generating
meaningful EUs and EQs. - Work time
- Discuss/Share our Enduring Understandings and
Essential Questions and how theyll contribute to
powerful Inquiry instruction. - Discuss how students will interact with the EUs
and EQs.
3The EU and EQ for today
- How do EUs and EQs frame and influence what and
how you teach? - EUs and EQs influence the quality and
meaningfulness of the content you teach.
4CR (Culturally Relevant) Protocols I use w/ EUs
EQs
- Numbered Heads Together
- Tea Party
- Musical Shares
- Shout Out
5Inquiry Characteristics
- Based on involvement
- Involvement is essential to understanding
- Question based
- Focused on learning the content for the purpose
of using it (balance btw school learning and
life-long learning) - Spontaneous, Collaborative, Fun, and Memorable
- Understanding are contextualized in experiences-
Remember that time when
6EUs and EQs Premises
- Begin with the end in mind.
- Teachers are designers- we are the experts of
what our students need to know. - Design what you are going to teach (curriculum)-
based on state standards AND what you know is
important. - Design how you are going to teach (pedagogy).
- What we teach- is primarily informed by national,
state, district standards that dictate what
students should know and be able to do. - Challenges us to be more thoughtful deliberate
about what we teach and how we teach. What kind
of thinkers and people we are contributing to?
7EUs and EQs
- Stage 1- Identify desired results
- This step is about clarifying priorities to make
sure that content is worthy of - understanding.
- What curriculum expectations do we need
- to meet? (GLEs)
- What should they know and be able to do (filter
GLEs b/c some are facts, knowledge, and others
big concepts) - What ENDURING understandings do we want
- them to come away with?
- What life-long questions are worth pondering?
8Filtering the standards
- For any subject taught in primary school,
- we might ask is it worth an adults
- knowing, and whether having known it as
- a child makes a person a better adult. A
- negative or ambiguous answer means the
- material is cluttering up the curriculum.
- (Wiggins McTighe,66)
9Why understandings have to be meaningful
- Learning that does not penetrate to the core of
what is vital about an idea yields abstract,
alien, and uninteresting lessons. (Wiggins
McTighe, 68) - Understandings are intended to be empowering-
personally and intellectually - Thats why we have to constantly be thinkingto
what end?
10Understandings
- Understanding is not yes or no but a matter
of degrees - Doing something correctly isnt evidence of
understanding, by itself. To understand is to
have done it in the right way, often reflected in
being able to explain why a particular skill,
approach, or body of knowledge is or is not
appropriate in a particular situation. (Wiggins
McTighe , 39) - Understanding is about transfer being able to use
what we have learned in new and sometimes
confusing settings. (Wiggins McTighe, 40) - Dewey said, understanding must be comprehended
and knowledge apprehended (Wiggins McTighe,
58)
11Something to consider
- 6 facets of understandings
- Some units lend themselves more to certain
understandings- depending on the big ideas youre
trying to develop through the class. - Wiggins McTighe , pg. 120- Figure 5.3
126 Facets of Understandings
- Explanation- What, Why and How
- Interpretation- Insights, text to life,
contextualized, stories - Application- I have a connection. Real world
problems - Perspective- What does it look like from another
point of view. Involves weighing diff. plausible
explanations, debates - Empathy- Respect for people different from
themselves. Causes them to be open-minded,
primary sources, music, poetry, experiential - Self-Knowledge- develop self-consciousness,
knowing ones own ignorance and patterns of
thought. - Also good for assessment. I use this for
essay/short answer tests.
13Writing Enduring Understandings
- 1. Look at your standards
- Group large amounts of content, especially
discrete facts, knowledge and basic skills into
big ideas (questions/understandings) and core
tasks (performance tasks). - 3. Make deliberate choices and set explicit
priorities for what you can do in the unit well. - - What is most important?
- How do the pieces connect?
- What should I pay attention to?
- What are the few bottom-line priorities?
- 4. From the big ideas that emerge form the
content into statements thatll help students
organize and make sense of the information
theyll be taught and their world.
14Essential Questions- Characteristics
- Good questions are one that pose dilemmas,
subvert obvious truths or force incongruities
upon our attention. (Wiggins McTighe,107) - They are questions that recur throughout all our
lives. (Wiggins McTighe,108) - The best questions push us to the heart of things!
15Checklist for Essentialness
- Cause genuine and relevant inquiry into big ideas
and core content. - Provoke deep thought, lively discussion,
sustained inquiry, and new understandings as well
as more questions. - Require students to consider alternatives, weigh
evidence, support their ideas, and justify their
answers. - Stimulate vital, ongoing rethinking of big ideas,
assumptions, prior lessons. - Spark meaningful connections with prior learning
and personal experiences. - Naturally recur, creating opportunities for
transfer to other situations and subjects.
16Remember
- No question is inherently essential (or trivial,
complex or important) (Wiggins McTighe,110) - Depends on the purpose, audience, and impact.
- What do you intend the students to do with the
question? How do you intend for them to think?
17Open vs. Guiding
- This spells out your intent
- Open questions- No definitive answer is expected,
challenges students thinking - Guiding questions- moves students towards a
deeper understanding of a big idea, posed as a
means of uncovering desired understandings
18Topical vs. Overarching
- Now that you have your intentYou want a mix
between overarching and topical. - Overarching
- Limitation Only overarching is too vague- drift
into aimless discussion- wont link to content - Benefit challenges thinking connects to the
world - Topical
- Limitation Only topical doesnt facilitate
transfer. - Benefit Necessary for focusing on desired unit
priorities.
19Essential Question Chart- Wiggins McTighe, 116
Intent Overarching Topical
Open - To what extent is US history a history of progress? What is progress? - What is a true friend? - How might Congress have better protected minority rights in the 1950s and 1960s? - Should Frog have lied to Toad?
Guiding - How much progress in civil rights has the US made since the founding of the country? - What are the signs of a fair weather friend? - What were the defining moments of the civil rights movement? - In what ways was Frog acting like a friend in the story?
20Writing Essential Questions
- 1. Begin with Enduring Understandings
- - you can also derive essential questions from
national and state standards - - Jeopardy format- given the content youll
teach (imagine assessments and activities)-
whats the question youll answer. - 2. Generate a list of questions- put them in kid
language - 3. Discuss what makes them essential
- - what should they be thinking about
- - why should they think those things and in
that way - 4. Consider the balance between topical and
broad questions.
21Stage One and Pedagogy
- Stage One and Pedagogy Interaction-- What you
believe and what you believe is important for
students to learn (stage 1) informs what and how
you teach. - How we design learning activities to meet
curricular goals- refers to our pedagogy. This
concerns itself with questions around, What kind
of thinkers/ people/ citizens are we producing?
(The combination of what you teach and how you
teach is aiding the development of certain
identities among your students!) - Scholars Giroux and Simon on critical pedagogy
When one practices pedagogy, one acts with the
intent of creating experiences that will organize
and disorganize a variety of understandings of
our nation and social world in particular
waysPedagogy is a concept which draws attention
to the processes through which knowledge is
produced. (Laddson-Billings, 14)
22Resources
- Wiggins, Grant and Jay McTighe. Understanding by
Design, Expanded 2nd Edition. 2005. - Laddson-Billings, Gloria. The Dreamkeepers
Successful Teachers of African American Children.
1994. -
- http//www.culturallyresponsive.org/