|
Goals & Objectives:
The goals of a question and answer activity are to empower students to control
the flow of content and to guide students ability to critically examine a
topic to develop their own higher order questions.
Sample objectives include:
After completing a question and answer activity, students will:
- develop attention to detail and critical analysis by formulating higher
order questions concerning a given concept
- synthesize information in order to determine missing information or information
deserving clarification
as determined by successfully attending to 80% of the requirements.
Prerequisites:
- None other than adequate Web access.
Materials and Resources:
What needs to be prepared in advance by the teacher? Usually, the questions
will center around a topic that the instructor or a guest presents. The topic
may be presented through readings or a lecture prepared by the instructor
or guest.
What does the student need to bring to the lesson? Students need to view
any prerequisite materials.
Guiding Questions for this Lesson:
Are students paying attention to the guest or the instructor lectures? Can
students formulate questions during the lesson that lead to additional learning
of all.
Lesson Outline and Procedure:
- Student read, view, or listen to a presentation or lecture prepared by
a guest expert or the instructor.
- Questions
- Synchronous
- Each student composes a question to ask during a synchronous
section.
- The guest, the instructor, or other students answer the questions
found to be most pertinent until all questions or as many as
possible or appropriate have been answered.
- Student-student questioning generally
occurs where there is peer review of a student-led presentation
or the like.
- Asynchronous
- Students submit a question to an asynchronous discussion forum.
- The guest, the instructor, or other students as assigned answer
the questions being posed. Additional discussion may be facilitate
Learning Assessments:
The primary assessment involves the quality of the questions being asked.
Are the questions clear, concise, pertinent, of the correct specificity,
etc. Additional assessment can include the quality of student answers to
student-student questions.
Teaching Strategies and Highlights:
- The instructor may need to formulate his/her own questions if there
is a particular aspect of the discussion that is being missed.
- Optional additional activity: Following the discussion, the instructor,
guest, and/or the students individually construct a synopsis of the discussion
outlining key points learned.
Accommodations:
- For synchronous activities, there may be a temporal accommodation for
those with disabilities affecting reading ability, such as those dependent
upon a screen reader or student's with dyslexia.
Timeline:
How much time would a typical online student require to complete such a
lesson? This is generally a quick activity, but the aspects of the activity
may be spread in time. An initial period may be required such as 3 days to
review materials prior to asking the questions, unless the materials are
presented during a synchronous session directly after which the students
pose questions. Students should be given at least 5-10 minutes to compose
their questions during a synchronous session. Some questions will come right
away, providing the answerer time to answer some questions while waiting
for others. Not all questions have to be answered as appropriate.
Learning Connections:
What connections to other
topics exist within the lesson? Questions posed by students, often do not
address the connectivity to other content. When these connections are not
made, the instructor should facilitate the linkage of information in any
discussions or summaries presented.
Ideas for Lesson Evaluation and Teacher Reflection:
How did the students like the lesson? End of semester evaluations should
ask about the usefulness and learning accomplished through such activities.
Difficulties experienced should be addressed for current and future courses
and students. When the student population is not effectively constructing
questions it could be that the topic is not being delivered in a manner condusive
to questioning. Alternative activities or lesson presentation may be considered.
Back to Top
|