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Eight Elements of Thinking1) generates purposes2) raises questions3) uses information4) utilizes concepts5) makes inferences6) makes assumptions7) generates implications8) embodies a point of view
1. Formulate methods for involving students in high quality discussions about abstract concepts.
2. Develop feedback strategies for grabbing HOTS verbal cues
3. Create HOTS lesson plans that provide for planned and unplanned use of HOTS.
How does clay feel when it is being
sculpted?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
How does gum feel when it is being
chewed?
Would you rather be a hiccup or a burp?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As an occupation, would you rather be a painter on a suspension bridge
or an engineer on a submarine?
What might oil ask water?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What might wisdom ask fear?
How many different homework excuses can
you come up with?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List all the different words you can think of that have
to do with the study of mathematics.
Buy Bloom’s Blooms!
Meta Cognition’s
StatuesDaggett’s Dogs
They’re rigorous
and
relevant!
Co
st
a’s
QuotesTeachers: 80 questions per hour. +All students combined: 2 questions per hour (Dillon, 1988)
A teacher asks about 1000 questions per week. (Kerry, 1982)
Questions: 80% comprehension; 15% management; 5% higher level. (Redfield & Rousseau, 1981)
Why the predominance of lower level questions?1. The necessity for students to know facts before they progress to speculation or high levels of thought.2. The curriculum is by nature fact-oriented rather than thought-oriented; and if teachers want their students to "learn the curriculum," they will naturally focus on factual questions.3. Teachers who lack the necessary skills to formulate
questions that require higher level thought. (Gall, 1970)
Questions: 60% require factual recall; 20% require thinking; 20% are procedural. (Gall, 1984)
“Good answer”
“Good thinking.”“Wonderful response.”“Interesting thinking.”
Bear Speak
Japan
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HOT Skills Questions Template
HOT Skills Questions Template
HOT Skills Questions Template
1. Formulate methods for involving students in high quality discussions about abstract concepts.
2. Develop feedback strategies for grabbing HOTS verbal cues .
3. Create HOTS lesson plans that provide for planned and unplanned use of HOTS.
Tour Ends….Objectives accomplished?
End
AVIDCosta's Levels of Thinking and Questioning
Following slides not in yet:
Be MetacognitiveVenn diagram of three circles:
Practice Thinking: Model the thinking you want.Encourage students in the thinking you want.Hold students responsible for the thinking they do.
Using Cues and Questions to Enhance Higher Order ThinkingIntroduction SlideCALA-center for the Advancement of Learning and AssessmentFlorida State UniversityState test scores were at the bottom in USA and now are among the highest according to article in The Economist.They teach reasoning skills and then assess reasoning skills on state tests. SlideEight Elements of Thinkinggenerates purposes raises questions uses informationutilizes conceptsmakes inferencesmakes assumptionsgenerates implicationsembodies a point of view Each of these influences the others.(Foundation for Critical Thinking) Slide: HOTSHigher Order Thinking Skills Creative Critical Logical Reflective Metacognative( difficult to separate) (So important to include) Thinking + flavor = Reasoning