The Magic of Open-Ended Questions in Social Annotation
Are your students proficient at asking initial questions about a text but struggling to deepen their Hypothesis discussions with their classmates? How can we better equip students to engage in meaningful and sustained conversations without continuous instructor facilitation? Let’s take a look at some strategies to unlock conversation through the magic of open-ended questions.
Learning through Conversation
Students might be interested to know that throughout history, philosophers and educational theorists have explored the relationship between dialogue and learning, recognizing conversation–and questioning in particular–as essential not only for intellectual growth but also for personal development. Perhaps the most familiar example of learning through conversation is the
Thinking more broadly, open-ended questions are fundamental to how we explore our world. For instance, in scientific research, questions serve as the foundation for developing testable hypotheses and guide our evaluation of the ethical implications of our findings.
Open-Ended Questions are Divergent Questions
According to McComas and Abraham (2004), we can think of
Ideas for Deepening Conversation
Here are some strategies and activities that can develop questioning skills and the habits of mind necessary for inquiry-driven learning.
Practice identifying convergent and divergent questions. Ask students to categorize various question types (maybe using Hypothesis tags ) and create examples of their own. - Annotate a conversation. Do you know of a YouTube video that exemplifies open-ended questioning? Consider incorporating it into a Hypothesis YouTube annotation assignment, and ask students to reflect upon what makes the conversation interesting and/or engaging. What questions made a difference in their learning?
- Wonder “what if.” Encourage students to practice hypothetical and counterfactual thinking in their annotations, for example, What if the world ran out of rare earth minerals? What if the Treaty of Versailles had been different?
- Use conversational roles. In Hypothesis small reading groups, assign students to different reading roles: discussion leader, connector, advocate, predictor, and so on to practice different kinds of questioning.
Get metacognitive! Ask students to describe the kinds of questions they find useful to developing conversation. How might they use these judgments to develop their own questioning skills? - Encourage self-reflection. At the beginning of the course, ask students to write a statement of “learning ethos,” in which they reflect on their values and dispositions as learners. This exercise may promote a deeper commitment to classroom conversations.
- Connect course readings to bigger questions and real-world contexts. What does this week’s short story have to say about the meaning of happiness? What implications does this unit’s case study have for real-world solutions to poverty, climate change, or global health challenges? Creating an inquiry-driven classroom may require instructors to reconsider how their course content relates to “big picture” questions that provoke student curiosity and attention about the world outside of the classroom.
If your class is struggling to develop student-driven discussions, consider trying out one of these strategies and/or attending a Hypothesis school partner workshop to learn about additional ideas for using Hypothesis in your classroom!