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Dr. B, if I may get things started (cough, cough), so first off since you teach literacy, it is probably helpful if, instead of reading and writing you think about essential questions that embrace all 6 language arts - reading, writing, viewing, listening, speaking and representing. Put more simply critiquing and composing across multimodal texts.
I would maybe take a question like "what is good writing?" and make it center on the learner "What can I do to become a better writer? or How will I know if I'm becoming a better writer? Does that make sense. I came across this page this morning and I liked this
I'd be remiss if I didn't thank you, too, Ryan. ") Thanks.
The page/chapter from a book you found was excellent.
So, are essential questions a way to 'get at' school pride? I'm not so bold as to post that on our NING . . . yet. ")
You might want to modify language for 6th graders; I've used the following essential questions for high school students (mostly grades 11 and 12). These are just the questions I remember without looking for them because I often used them (or some version of them) at different times over the years. If I find or think of more that might be useful, I will add them. (Let me know if any one proves useful to you.)
Jen-
I think that Ryan is on to something - if our essential questions get too granular- then they really limit our ability to make connections across all of the content areas to those understandings that really are essential or enduring.
The materials that I have read (Wiggins, McTighe, Erikson) all focus on thinking about the concepts first - boiling down the standards to the big picture concepts that are embedded within them - and then determining what is most important (or essential) about the understanding of those concepts.
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