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Reading & Literacy

The Common Core Raises Questions About Teachers鈥 Questioning Skills

By Sarah D. Sparks 鈥 September 28, 2015 | Corrected: February 21, 2019 6 min read
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Corrected: A previous version of this story included a misspelling of Jeffrey Greene鈥檚 name.

There are no stupid questions. But when it comes to the common core, teachers are finding that their questions could be asking a lot more of students.

Educators have called the focus on 鈥渃lose reading鈥 one of the most critical shifts in the Common Core State Standards鈥 approach to literacy, and one that many teachers need practice to perfect.

Using questioning techniques, teachers can guide students to think critically about complex literary and informational texts and to construct evidence-based arguments based on them. But getting students to dig into deeper meaning requires going beyond simply asking them to cite an example or find an answer in the text. It means encouraging them to build interpretations and analyses from what they鈥檝e read.

To that end, a number of new district and researcher-led programs are being developed to help teachers learn to ask better questions in connection with reading assignments or activities.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 hard for teachers is forming these questions,鈥 said Lindsay C. Matsumura, an associate education dean at the University of Pittsburgh who studies inquiry. Questioning 鈥渞eally requires a lot of planning to do it effectively.鈥

For example, in discussing E.B. White鈥檚 classic children鈥檚 novel Charlotte鈥檚 Web, typically a teacher might ask a student what Templeton the rat does to help Wilbur the pig. But a deeper question, Matsumura said, might be: 鈥 鈥業s Templeton the rat a good friend?鈥 He really helps Wilbur, in the text, but you could argue his help always comes at a cost. What鈥檚 critical [in close reading] is you need to reasonably be able to take different perspectives on the text. That is getting to the heart of common-core standards.鈥

No 鈥楻ight鈥 Answers

In a 2009 meta-analysis of class discussions led by Pennsylvania State University psychologist P. Karen Murphy, a team of researchers found that most teacher questions ask students to identify surface features of the text, like grammar, plot, characters, and climax.

鈥淚 initiate a question, the student responds, I evaluate,鈥 Murphy said in describing a typical exchange. Students answering those questions became adept in basic story structure, but the skills did not translate to deeper understanding of the material or the ability to apply what they learned in one text to another.

By contrast, the questions that improved students鈥 critical thinking and deeper understanding did not have a 鈥渞ight鈥 answer. Rather, they asked students to speculate on how actions might unfold or to draw on other texts to inform their understanding of the passage being discussed.

Murphy and Matsumura each have been awarded $1.5 million in federal grants to develop some of the first professional-development programs to help teachers improve discussions during close reading as prescribed under the common core.

Murphy鈥檚 training initiative, dubbed Quality Talk, grew out of early research on question types. She and Jeffrey Greene of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill are crafting a set of videotaped model lessons and an assessment tool for teachers to analyze their own inquiry techniques.

Matsumura and her colleagues at Pittsburgh鈥檚 Learning Research and Development Center, meanwhile, have developed a PD program that uses an eight-week online course and individual coaching. The training includes how to select meaty texts and conceive questions that help students understand multiple perspectives.

Close reading is intended not only to push students to think more deeply and critically about what they read, but also to put students with less background knowledge on more equal footing with classmates during class discussions, according to Matsumura.

鈥淭here are real problems in society we want kids to be reading about鈥攚ater quality, investing in space exploration鈥攖hese are complex problems. But those texts are by and large not available to kids,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou have to do a lot of background building, mini-lectures on the subject, and teachers sometimes feel insecure about their own knowledge.鈥

Claire Borge and Audrey Jakes, teachers in the Fairfield-Suisun district in Northern California, see that discomfort a lot.

Both are on special assignment in the district鈥檚 Teacher Support Center, working to help some 1,000 teachers in preschool through adult education classes improve their classroom discourse. Using workshops and ongoing lesson modeling and coaching, the pair helps teachers learn to ask questions that spur discussions about not only text, but also photos, charts, and even political cartoons.

鈥淲e are coming out of a time period in public education where the questions have all been prewritten for us, the curriculum has all been written for us, and now we are being given the opportunity to write our own questions within the curriculum,鈥 said Borge, a 30-year veteran teacher. 鈥淎t first, everyone is really afraid to really look at these question stems and think.鈥

Hitting the Stopping Points

In one school, the coaches came to help a teacher with one lesson and ended up working for eight weeks with all the teachers in that grade. Teachers learned from and built on each others鈥 questions to devise lessons integrating science and social studies with reading.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a gradual release,鈥 Borge said. 鈥淭he first year was very general鈥攚hat is the common core, how does a standard progress from kindergarten through 12th grade鈥攂ut that鈥檚 not going to translate to classroom practice. [In workshops] teachers see the strategies and go, 鈥榊eah, yeah, yeah,鈥 but when they see them layered in their classrooms, it鈥檚 really transformative.鈥

As teachers use more open-ended questions, Jakes said, they also begin to step back and encourage students to ask most of the questions of one another.

The first time Borge and Jakes modeled close reading for an 11th grade history teacher鈥檚 students, 鈥測ou could hear crickets,鈥 Jakes said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not that [the students] thought nothing, but they were scared. ... You could see they were thinking, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e not supposed to ask me, you鈥檙e supposed to tell me the answer is C.鈥 鈥

Well-timed questions can be critical to getting students to open up, Matsumura said. She found teachers often read through a chapter or text selection completely before starting a discussion.

As part of the training course, they are learning to plan stopping points where the text is ambiguous and launch questions that get students thinking about what is going on. 鈥淲e want to teach kids to not just start at the beginning and read all the way through,鈥 Matsumura said. 鈥淎 good reader is thinking about what they are reading as they are going through.鈥

In a pilot study of the Pittsburgh Learning Research and Development Center training, Matsumura found these more open and in-depth class conversations were particularly helpful to English-language learners. She is still studying exactly why such students showed bigger comprehension improvements than other students, but she speculated that more-integrated discussions of academic vocabulary and connection among different texts and visuals might have made the difference.

It鈥檚 easy for teachers to get overwhelmed trying to implement all the changes in the common core at once.

鈥淪tart small,鈥 Jakes advised. 鈥淐ommon core is about shifts, not leaps. If you change one small thing in your practice, and then another thing, over the course of the year, you have changed.鈥

That approach has proved popular; Borge鈥檚 and Jakes鈥 latest workshop had 50 teachers signed up, with a waiting list for 18 more.

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A version of this article appeared in the September 30, 2015 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as Common Standards Raise Questions on Questioning

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