Reflections on the QFT, the Simplest Approach to Student Centered Learning

The Right Question Institute offers professional development sessions across the country on Teaching Students to Ask Their Own Questions. Recently, one of our guest associates, Richard Wallace (@wally), facilitated a session and then offered his reflection on the Question Formulation Technique as a student centered learning strategy for any school environment. In his reflection, he […]

RQI: Looking Back, Encouraging Forward

In the words of artist Antony Gormley, we are “trying to make work that is reflective and is encouraging of reflection.” This year has been a transformative year for our organization and seeing the growth and conversation about the value and impact of our educational strategy has made us very excited for our future. With […]

The Question Not Heard Around the World: A New New Year’s Resolution

  I was four years old. I remember the moment very clearly. My older cousin asked me, “Why do you ask so many questions?” and I responded, “Well, I want to know more and more.” I couldn’t really explain it to her, but I just had this urge to learn about the world around me. […]

Lessons from the American Public Health Association Conference

What do a physician who works with farmworkers, a researcher studying health among incarcerated individuals, a nurse working with cancer patients, and a community health worker helping low-income patients find subsidized housing all have in common? They all stopped by the RQI booth at the American Public Health Association (APHA) conference or attended our presentation, […]

InQuiring Minds: Engaging Patients and Motivating Students

After a brief hiatus we are back with the latest installment of inQuiring Minds. We continue to expand our work in health care, where community health workers are now learning to teach patients to ask better questions and participate in decisions. Stay tuned to this blog for more updates about RQI’s work in health care […]

Increasing Rigor in an Elementary Math Classroom

This is a guest post by educator Jay Corrigan. “Who’s that?” Several of the 5th graders in the classroom asked that question aloud as I stepped into the room.  I was there to try out the Question Formulation Technique.  I had read the book Make Just One Change, studied the blogs, and watched Dan Rothstein […]

Building Student Engagement in a Special Education Classroom

This is a guest post by Esther Lee As a special education teacher in New York City, I had gotten used to my heterogeneous classroom of kids.  Last year, however, I was taken aback by my classroom that consisted of 9 to 12 year olds, with mild to severe disabilities of various kinds.  I had […]

New Online Resources for Educators

New and updated resources on using the Right Question educational strategy are available! Are you looking for tools to help create a Question Focus to stimulate your students’ questions? Are you new to the network and would like to have tools to introduce this strategy to your students or teachers or parents? If you answered […]

Questions or Answers. Questions and Answers.

My daughter, Ariela, a Global Studies teacher at East Brooklyn Community High School in New York and clever observer of interesting items in the Internet Galaxy, sent along a comic strip with her curator’s advice: “For RQI” (Right Question Institute). For RQI and how. Two characters from an unknown species sitting on a bench, two […]