Lessons from a Harvard Medical School Conference on Medical Education Dan Rothstein | Co-Director, The Right Question Institute. I recently crossed the river from Cambridge to Boston to spend some time at Harvard Medical School listening to a slew of fascinating discussions about how to improve medical education. Harvard Medical School (HMS) deserves a lot of […]
It’s Their Class Now! Building Classrooms of Curiosity
“Just curious” It’s a statement that has been near and dear to my heart for as long as I can remember. “Does life on other planets exist? Just curious.” “Is the Bible a real history book? Just curious.” “What was life like in the Americas before the Europeans arrived? Just curious.” A couple of years […]
What are you wondering when you hear…?: Student Engagement in a Project-Based Learning Primary Classroom
Inquiry-based learning has been getting a lot of attention lately for student engagement and developing 21st Century skills. Rather than being filled with teacher lectures, students are doing the research and driving the instruction. A lot of schools are adopting PBL to embrace this type of learning in the classroom. This acronym can mean Project-Based […]
RQI in ASCD’s Educational Leadership
“I heard questions that I never would have come up with.” Critical thinking and questioning are foundational skills that too often are not prioritized in the classroom among other social institutions. However, one simple shift can turn stagnant situations into actively engaging environments. In this month’s Educational Leadership, our directors Dan Rothstein and Luz Santana […]
Inquiring Minds: Curiosity as a Catalyst to Discovery
written and compiled by Jane Santa Cruz This issue of InQuiring Minds reaches back to explore that initial feeling of curiosity that can then spark all learning, creativity, and innovation. We should understand why curiosity is so valuable before we can begin to know how to keep our curiosity alive. The articles below capture the […]
Using the QFT in the Professional Development of Librarians
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 […]