• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

EdTechTeam

Global Network of Educational Technologists

  • Coaching
  • Google Certifications
  • Custom PD
  • Blog
  • Free Resources
  • Events
  • Contact

Inquiry

3 Tips to Create an Inquiry-Based Classroom

January 8, 2020

This blog post is sponsored by Acer Education, a partner of EdTechTeam.

Inquiry-Based Learning, or Enquiry-Based Learning, is a student-centered approach. The teacher acts as a facilitator while students are self-driven to acquire knowledge. The incorporation of technology into this kind of instruction can be done for most age groups to enhance their learning, indefinitely. All of these practices are predicated on the general research methodology of motivating inquiry, exploring research and reflecting in an evaluative way. 

There are several models of teaching that lend themselves to being used to plan inquiry-based lessons. The 5Es (BSCS) model is similar to Inquiry Training and Scientific Inquiry models as well as the well-known Group Investigation (Thelen & Dewey). 

5E Inquiry Model Steps:   

  1. Engage
  2. Explore
  3. Explain
  4. Elaborate/ Extend
  5. Evaluate

 

Motivate by Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Alpha Stock Images

Engage & Motivate

Puzzlements are ways to engage students in inquiry-based learning. They are often the initial steps of inquiry-based models of teaching. The best lessons begin with a strong motivation to captivate students. 

Presentation tools such as Microsoft PowerPoint and Google Slides can be used to introduce puzzlements such as quotes, media and other inspirational ideas. 

  • Google Slides Q&A feature – You can check students’ understanding and highlight popular questions with this tool. Furthermore, students can use this technology to be inspired to ask questions and then utilize resources to find their own answers through investigative research.  
  • Slides Add-ons such as Nearpod and Pear Deck make lessons interactive while promoting the 4Cs (critical thinking, communication, collaboration & creativity)

Connection to Research

Students are also motivated by hands-on application of technological tools. In the research process, we begin with inquiry and then search to find answers and solutions. We can teach students to be a part of this process via technological tools such as:

  • Hyper docs – ‘springboards’ for students to engage in their learning by accessing teacher-created docs or making their own
  • Research and resource lists in Google Sites, Microsoft Excel and/or Google Sheets
  • Research folders organized in Google Drive and/or Google Classroom 
  • Share findings in presentation tools such as PowerPoint and Slides

The more students are involved in the inquiry process, the more they internalize the cyclical nature of autonomous learning wherein they wonder, search and repeat.

Evaluative Reflection

Reflection is an integral part of the learning cycle and fits in nicely towards the end of lessons or units as Evaluation (the final step of a 5E lesson). The evaluation phase encourages students to assess their own abilities and understanding; it also provides opportunities for teachers to evaluate students’ progress towards the achievement of the educational objectives.

Ideally, reflection is naturally inspired through the research process – often inquiries that arise evidence this! We can help facilitate students’ metacognitive awareness by prompting evaluative thinking. 

Students can self-assess using checklists and rubrics. They can also demonstrate their reflective understanding in creative ways. Here are a few ideas:

  • Google Forms – students can use these for polls & surveys or teachers can utilize them for gathering assessment data, such as with exit tickets 
  • Exit tickets can also be created and modified using creative tools such as Google Jamboard and Google Drawings

The most prevalent idea related to Inquiry-Based Learning is that there is no single way to create and implement these student-centered lessons; hence, there are infinite possibilities to infuse technology in them!

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you would like access to specific examples and templates related to these concepts, sign up for our free hour-long ‘Inquiry-Based Learning’ online course!

Explore and apply the novel tools that educators are using to integrate technology in the classroom with more free online courses, sponsored by ACER.

Quick Links:

4Cs of 21st Century Learning in a Connected Classroom 

BSCS Science Learning’s 5E Instructional Model

Joyce, Weil & Calhoun’s Models of Teaching textbook

‘Teaching Style & Models of Teaching’ article – seminal work

 

Want to learn more about using Inquiry-Based Learning? – Join us for a FREE online course in partnership with ACER. Sign up at https://www.edtechteam.online/acer 

 

Jessica is a Google Certified Innovator with more than 14 years’ experience educating students of all ages. She obtained a Master’s in Educational Psychology and Instructional Technology while working on a federal grant with her University of Southern California professors. Now she is an instructor for her alma mater, helping teaching candidates acquire their credentials and infuse technology in their classrooms. She has lived and worked in several schools worldwide as a teacher, coordinator and librarian. She’s conducted ICT, GATE and IB PYP professional development in the US, Italy, Germany and the UK. Meanwhile, Jessica has designed curriculum, presented at conferences and contributed to educational articles and textbooks published internationally. She believes teaching students literacy skills (of all types) is essential to promote lifelong learning.

Inquiry, Teacher Tips, Tip Tagged: Acer 2 Comments

HyperDocs in Math

May 17, 2019

As a high school math teacher for 29 years, I have watched my students change so much with how they learn and what they are exposed to in their school years. My students are products of instant feedback and they do not have to wonder about anything because they have Google in their pockets with their cell phones. A few years ago, as I was returning my paper assignment that I had graded, I noticed that my students would not even look at their mistakes. I have completely changed my class such that now my students get immediate feedback six times every single day in my class. Now my students look at their mistakes and learn from them before the assessment is given. I have experimented with many things in the classroom throughout my career and I can honestly say this works and I love it for many reasons. The most important reason is my students. I teach with HyperSlides and have built my slides to be engaging activities that allow students to work at their pace. They are able to complete interactive materials with instant feedback and built in self assessments. This provides students with more ownership of their learning and prevents waiting for a paper to be graded to see if they understand the content. HyperSlides is based on the strategy coined in the HyperDoc Handbook: Intentional Lesson Design Using Google Apps. Learn more about HyperDocs here.

Teacher Time

I start my class off with everyday with Teacher Time. Research shows that a student’s age plus one is the number of minutes you have of their attention before they start drifting from the topic. Therefore, if I teach 15-year-old students that means I have about 16 minutes to ask them to zone in and understand the material. Teacher Time is designed on that fact. I pre-select three to four problems that I teach to my students on a given topic or standard. I stand and deliver those problems in class as part of the teacher time, after completing those problems my students are directed to a Google Form with one problem that is similar to the one that they just watched me complete. The Google Form is branched, meaning that if students get the question right they move on to their Hyper Slides activities that I have prepared. If the student misses the question they are directed to help in the Google Form, which can be a video, or a problem that is worked out and placed in the form as an image. Once they are more comfortable with the question, the students try the problem again. If they are successful, they move forward, if they are not then they are given help as I watch their data live from the Google Form. Without my students having to ask for help, I make my way over and revisit the problem that was missed with individual attention while other students are moving forward.

Drag & Drop

Drag and Drop is one of the ways I allow my students to practice. It is interactive and allows them to practice the way their state assessment will be. In my state of Georgia, there is a Drag & Drop activity on the assessment that my students take. I have made a daily Drag & Drop in Google Slides for them each day as a quick practice and it is so much better than a worksheet. My students like this because they get a chance to Think-Pair-Share their results before turning in their slide deck. I want my students to be able to share and communicate about the math that we are doing in class. The Think-Pair-Share gives them time to collaborate with each other and build working relationships in their class, much like I do with my own job.

There are aspects of of digital Geometry lessons that are my students’ favorites. I do not assign traditional homework; instead I do a work session. The work session is an interactive engagement that provides the students a way to understand and practice their skills they have learned. The work session allows the students to ask for help and to sharpen their skills before their assessments. I use live data in my classroom daily. The live data is generated with Google Forms in a few different ways. I shared the Teacher Time You Try, however, built into each lesson is a Student You Try activity. The Student You Try is a Google Slide in the slide deck that has the pencil icon and my students know that they place their answer in a Google Form, which provides them with immediate feedback  on their comprehension of the standard. If they get the problem right they move forward, but if they do not get it right then help is given to them in that Google Form with a branched form that allows my students to see their mistake and to try again.

Self-Assessment

Self-assessment is an important piece of my class and I have my students self-assess twice daily. After completing the slide deck, students fill out the Google Form and the indicator for me to know if they got it, need more help or clearly don’t understand. I also provide a way for them to ask a question about the lesson. I choose to do this before they see their grade on the ticket, so a true value of the assessment is done before they see the grade. At the end of the slide deck, I give my students a self-assessment slide that asks them to decide how they feel about the lesson.  I think it is important that they can reflect on these as we progress through the curriculum of my class.

I use Bitmojis in my lessons and allow my students to use them to express how they feel about the lesson. I think for students that grow up with Bitmojis this is a great way for me to connect with them.

Another aspect of my class is my review menus. I realize that not every student needs every example, but some do. I teach to the many and accommodate the few, meaning I offer all kinds of different ways for my students to learn. This is an example of a menu for a summative review that I give my students. The red links are mandatory in my classroom and the other links are options depending on the self-assessments and the ticket grades for the unit. My students like the choices of the review menu, it helps them understand what to study for a summative assessment. My class has a high-stakes test, and showing my students’ study methods for their weaker standards is very important. I make menus according to topics so they can quickly find their materials. I teach using Google Classroom everyday. My students get a slide deck with all the different components and they get direct instruction for the topic of the day, everyday. However, to help with students missing class for different reasons, I post a video of me explaining the problems, and a PDF of the problems worked out in teacher terms so they can easily follow the process.

After years of teaching high school math, I have reflected often about my methods of teaching. Over the last three years I have taken my passion for using Hyper Slides in my classroom and applied it to training teachers. I share the things I have learned with educators around the world. Going digital is not for the sake of making teaching easier, but it does. The purpose was not to keep all things in my classroom organized, but it did. Integrating G-Suite for Education changed the landscape of learning FOR MY STUDENTS.

Lynda Moore has been a teacher for the last 29 years in Georgia, and the last 25 in Burke County at Burke County High School in Waynesboro, GA. She has taught all different levels of high school math. A lover of technology and a lifelong learner she has two children, her 21-year-old son, Trent and her 16-year-old daughter, Addison. She has been working with Google in her classroom for the last four years and training teachers the last three years. Teaching online Google Classes has allowed her to connect with many teachers learning about how to better engage their students. You can connect with Lynda at:
Twitter: @Lyndamoore209
Facebook: KnowMooreMath
Instagram: @KnowMooreMath
Email: [email protected]

Get The Hyperdocs Handbook: Digital Lesson Design with Google Apps from the EdTechTeam Store or on Amazon

Google for Education, HyperDocs, Inquiry, Math, Student Agency 1 Comment

Footer

Let’s Stay Connected

We're dropping into your inbox with all of our new webinars, guides, tips and content created with YOU in mind.

EdTechTeam
5405 Alton Parkway
Ste 5A-305
Irvine, CA 92604

 

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
If you have any questions please email us at:

[email protected]

Copyright ©2023 EdTechTeam : Global Network of Educational Technologists- Theme by Lovely Confetti