Why Inquiry? [3:17]
About
Learn how inquiry-based learning can benefit studentsTranscript
Motivation and ownership of learning are vital to a student's educational journey. Inquiry gives students the opportunity to make decisions about the direction of their own learning. That, in turn, increases the student's engagement and motivation. An example might be a project in which students are asked to create their own campaign to run for president. They can choose the platform issues that are important to them, imagine what their constituents' concerns might be, and conduct their own research. By making their own decisions about how to craft a winning election strategy, students can invest more fully in the project, and take pride and ownership of the final product.
The inquiry process lends itself well to collaborative and cooperative learning. In collaborative learning, students work as a team to explore a shared interest and craft questions that will guide them towards a shared goal. Perhaps a group of students is tasked with working together on that campaign to help one of them become president. With such a complex project, students can identify different objectives and create smaller teams to tackle them: one group can write policy, another can create a media plan, and another can conduct polls. This can allow students to not only learn more about disseminating complicated projects, but help them engage in teamwork, resolve conflicts, and strengthen interpersonal skills.
Finally, inquiry-based learning gives students the opportunity to use higher-order thinking skills. The act of inquiry focuses on producing knowledge through experience and exploration rather than "reproducing" existing information. This can happen when students engage in the full range of independent learning steps: questioning, hypothesizing, analyzing, problem-solving, and evaluating. For example, after creating and implementing their strategy to create a successful presidential campaign, students can reflect on their own experience and identify their own learning outcomes. What strategies did and didn't work? What were the organizational challenges when it came to coordinating teams? When students define the knowledge they acquired themselves, they can apply their knowledge to new situations more effectively later.
As the classic proverb goes, "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime." By engaging in inquiry-based learning, students can gain lifelong learning skills that can serve them both in and outside of school.
Activities
This lesson discusses the benefits that engaging in inquiry can bring to a school community. In "I Made It Easier and They Still Didn't Learn" and "Inquiry: Inquiring Minds Want to Know," Mary Boyd Ratzer and Barbara K. Stripling share some of the positive outcomes they've seen blossom using inquiry. Read the articles and then consider the benefits that inquiry can bring to your school community, using the Reflect & Practice activity.
Think about the curriculum currently taught in your school—yours and your colleagues'. In what places would students benefit from increased motivation and ownership, more cooperative learning, and/or a greater focus on higher order thinking skills?
Once you've identified those areas, use the above form to write an "elevator pitch" that you can use to present to collaborating teachers or to your administration to advocate for a more inquiry-based approach for that particular section of the curriculum. Use the reasoning from the video lesson as well as the articles to help you craft your argument.
Entry ID: 2214587
Additional Resources
Entry ID: 2214087