After a lovely week back in the classroom, I still feel there is so much to be said about the idea of questioning strategies. I know that in class we really didn't get to talk about them too much, but this was something super important that I personally know I can use some practice with. I know that finding the right way to ask a question is important. Obviously there are reasons for asking each question at each cognitive level. But how do you know which one to use and when to use them?! So, after searching for a bit, I found this dope website with quite a bit to say about all this. It's called " Questioning Strategies " it is an article that was put out by Illinois CITL, and offers tons of answers for our questions about questions. This particular article focuses a lot on the ideas of Bloom's Taxonomy that we discuss all the time in class. Questions should always be reaching for different levels of cognitive development, and these questions should vary t...
Blogpost: How might you incorporate differentiation and translanguaging strategies in using/teaching one of Tovani’s reading strategies? So, this week we really tried to focus on the ideas of Translanguaging and Differentiated learning. We also kept in mind some of the different reading strategies that Tovani writes about in her book. These two things can go hand in hand and we really should take the time to put them together to help our students learn as best as possible. One of my favorite ideas that I heard recently, from Maria actually, was the idea of having books in the classroom in different languages. Say for example, my class is reading Catcher in the Rye together, and I have one or two emergent bilingual students. If I kept a copy of this in Spanish, or other languages even, I could use this to help my students gain understanding of the reading itself. To grab out the main ideas and to connect them to what I want to teach about the book itself. But of course, just this a...