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 […]
Elevating Socratic Seminar by Having Students Ask The Questions
“…this was clear evidence that the QFT was a process that students viewed as an authentic and effective tool for their learning, not just something that their teacher was making them do.” In our last weekly post from the field, educator Robert Welch describes how his students embrace the Question Formulation Technique and use it […]
Integrating the QFT and Bloom’s Taxonomy to Increase Reading Comprehension With My Fourth Grade Male Readers
Two years ago I was focusing on boosting reading engagement among my struggling fourth grade male readers. As part of my interventions, I encouraged my students to read graphic novels, partner read, and write about their reading. After a few months of experimenting with these interventions and collecting data, I noticed great increases in reading […]
Controversy as Catalyst for Questioning: Students Question the Rolling Stone Cover after Marathon Bombing
This Tuesday, our weekly post from the field comes from Matt Parrilli (on RQI Network @mparrilli), an English department chair in Illinois. by Matt Parrilli Why do they make him look like a celebrity?” “Was the date and location of the bombing significant to him?” “What did his family do to fail him?” “Does where […]
Making Questioning a Habit of Mind
by Jay Corrigan Annie Fetter has a great video online where she talks about Noticing and Wondering. As adults, we notice things and wonder about things in a way that is almost instinctual. Most of us probably don’t have to remind ourselves that we need to notice things before we solve a problem. We just […]
Embrace the Awkward – A Shift in Healthcare Practice
Last weekend we conducted a training for Tufts undergraduate students about the Right Question-Effective Patient Strategy (RQ-EPS) and how they could teach it to patients. The students volunteer at the Sharewood free clinic and provide information about public health topics, check patients’ vitals, and refer patients to a case manager. They inform patients they can […]
Promote All Questions: Maintaining Neutrality In Classroom Discussions
Primary QFT: Being Switzerland One thing that distinguishes elementary students from secondary students is that an elementary student is much more interested in pleasing their teacher. They are on a constant look out for clues as to what the teacher wants so that they can give it to them and receive the praise and recognition […]
Equalizing Access to Innovation: WhatsApp and The Right Question Institute offer simple and powerful resources
What does The Right Question Institute have in common with WhatsApp? Well, it’s not $16 billion of Facebook’s money. But, here are a few parallels that occurred to me: I. VISION: Reach lots of people WhatsApp: Jan Koum, one of the co-founders of WhatsApp “expects five billion people to be using smartphones within the next […]
What If Students Ask Silly Questions? Question Formulation and Classroom Management
This blog is part two in a four part blog series from an educator in the field, Jay Corrigan. Over the next few weeks, Jay will share how his school community has integrated the Question Formulation Technique into their classroom practice. Read part 1 here where Jay described a scaffolded approach that starts in kindergarten and […]
Implementing the Question Formulation Technique with our Youngest Students!
This week our weekly post from an educator in the field comes from Jay Corrigan. Over the next few weeks, Jay will share how his school community has integrated the Question Formulation Technique into their classroom practice. While some educators use the entire QFT starting in the early elementary classroom, Jay describes a scaffolded approach that […]