When I was a building librarian, my partner and I always wanted students to develop those metacognitive skills in developing questions as they moved through the research process. Originally, we were moving them through another inquiry process and while this worked well with some students, many students and teachers felt that this method was too […]
InQuiring Minds: Is a Patient Portal Enough?
Compiled and Written by Right Question Intern Jessica Faust. Although IT solutions help involve patients in their appointments through apps and portals, miscommunication between care provider and patient is still a prevalent issue in medicine. The articles below highlight the challenges of engaging patients and demonstrate the prevailing need for non-technological strategies to complement IT solutions […]
Reflections from RQI’s East Coast Summer Seminar
Written and Compiled by Jane Santa Cruz We had a great Boston seminar on Monday July 14th and Tuesday July 15th! Thank you to all the participants who attended Teaching Your Students to Ask Their Own Questions and contributed to rich discussions and constructive problem-solving around how to implement the Question Formulation Technique (QFT) in […]
InQuiring Minds: High-Tech and Low-Tech Patient Engagement Perspectives
This issue of inQuiring Minds focuses on the different methodologies being discussed to engage patients in their healthcare. The articles below break down this challenge by indicating the need for a combination of high-and low-tech solutions to improve patient involvement and transparency in medicine. “Without information, and without a voice, patients are unlikely to flip […]
Questions for Design: Asking Questions as Toolset
I am using the QFT to lead up to the design challenges of which my students would do at the end of the course which involve logo design, advertising, package design, typography and publication design. Before they do the actual challenges, students will use the QFT to ask questions about designing with restraint. The purpose […]
Teaching the QFT to Novice Teachers
As a teacher educator at Elon University, Jeff Carpenter works with students preparing to teach in seven different content areas and at multiple grade levels. The Question Formulation Technique (QFT) has been helpful in his work because it is a simple, flexible strategy that can be used at different grade levels and in any content […]
“Right” Questions vs. “Correct” Answers: Teaching Deeper Learning
As I explained the importance of withholding final judgment as we gather evidence and information, I saw a crooked grin creep onto his face. “I see what you’re doing,” he said, nodding as he prepared to walk out of class. When I prepare lessons for my students at Pathways in Technology Early College High School […]
Out of the Dust: A Teacher’s Reflections on Getting Students to Ask Questions in Literacy
This post is the last in a series of guest blogs by Robert Welch on how he utilizes the Question Formulation Technique (QFT) in his curriculum around the novel Out of the Dust. To see his previous blogs click here. Ultimately , students left their experiences reading and discussing Out of the Dust with a good of […]
inQuiring Minds: Initiating Innovation
Innovation seems to be a buzzword but what does it really mean? How can we understand innovation as the product of great questions? Questioning has been found to be at the heart of innovation. As we speed through the beginning of the year, The Right Question Institute has been considering the power of questions as […]










