Dear Heather and all,
I have used QAR to teach levels of questioning and have found it to be 
successful. I'm interested to look up AVID. 

Nora


--- Original Message  ----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LIT] Adolescent Literacy Discussion
Sent: Saturday, January 27, 2007 10:53:20 PM EST

Bill,

Yes, I've taught my students Blooms Taxonomy last year when introducing 
the
research paper, and they had to come up with a research question. I made 
a
chart and put examples of questions on the chart. I also had them 
practice
coming up with different levels of questions. I thought it went really 
well.

This year, when I was in the classroom, I taught AVID and they use the 3
levels of questioning by someone I'm forgetting right now. This was a 
little
easier to understand. They did an activity where they got questions and 
had
to categorize which level they went in.

I think questions can get better as the year goes on, without directly
teaching the taxonomy. but for my purposes I had to teach it because I
needed higher level questions for their research right then. So I guess 
it
depends on your purpose.

On 1/27/07, Bill IVEY <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> "
> Does anyone actually teach their students Bloom's taxonomy as an aid to
> asking effective questions which would lead to analysis, synthesis,
> organization and evaluation? I tried it once, but found it really hard 
to
> get across. On the other hand, when I went to more of a democratic 
focus
> in creating units, the questions just naturally seemed to get sharper 
as
> the year progressed. I was thinking the rewards involved in answering 
more
> sophisticated questions are so much greater that that fact in itself 
helps
> stimulate students to ask better questions. Possible?
>
> Take care,
> Bill Ivey
> Stoneleigh-Burnham School
>
>
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-- - Heather

"The world of books is the most remarkable creation of
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centuries dead." --Clarence Day

"While the rhetoric is highly effective, remarkably little
good evidence exists that there's any educational substance
behind the accountability and testing movement."
—Peter Sacks, Standardized Minds

"When our children fail competency tests the schools lose
funding. When our missiles fail tests, we increase
funding. "
—Dennis Kucinich, Democratic Presidential Candidate
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