HomepageISTEEdSurge
Skip to content
ascd logo

Log in to Witsby: ASCD’s Next-Generation Professional Learning and Credentialing Platform
Join ASCD
April 1, 2022
Vol. 79
No. 7
Relevant Read

Pulling Back the Curtain on Student Thinking

author avatar

    premium resources logo

    Premium Resource

    Instructional Strategies
    photo of a book cover
      Questioning for Formative Feedback: Meaningful Dialogue to Improve Learning by Jackie Acree Walsh (ASCD, 2022)
      Reciprocity. It's not the first word you think of when considering teacher questioning. Teachers often view question-posing as a strategy to help guide students through a lesson and determine if they are engaged and understanding—maybe even to help them stay alert! Any feedback involved is generally some form of evaluative teacher response. But what this age-old strategy lacks, according to Jackie Walsh, is reciprocity—exchanges through which everyone in the classroom provides feedback on others' learning and ideas and contributes to the whole class learning together.
      When a teacher plans for reciprocity, she uses questions to elicit responses that uncover students' thinking (which is feedback for her). The teacher then uses follow-up questions or observations to draw out the original respondent and other students' thinking. This leads students into brief dialogues that help create new ways of seeing or understanding. Learners get feedback beyond what they could get from one teacher.
      Classroom-based examples in the book (including artifacts like dialogue transcripts and videos of questioning-in-action accessible via QR codes) show how this cycle of questioning, revealing student thinking (and encouraging more thinking, using wait time), and dialoging pushes thinking forward—and why Walsh calls it "formative."
      Pre-planning is crucial, especially in question-forming. Chapter 5 provides guidance on how to create questions that reveal student thinking and "response strategies"—sample instructions that lead students to give fuller answers. Jackie Walsh's quick reference guide Generating Formative Feedback, also from ASCD, gives nuts-and-bolts on how to form questions that generate rich student responses and strengthen students' questions of each other, so reciprocal sharing of thinking blooms.

      Naomi Thiers is the managing editor of Educational Leadership.

      Learn More

      ASCD is a community dedicated to educators' professional growth and well-being.

      Let us help you put your vision into action.
      Related Articles
      View all
      undefined
      Instructional Strategies
      Joyful, Better Project-Based Learning
      Bryan Goodwin & Jess Nastasi
      3 weeks ago

      undefined
      Student-Led Feedback for Critical Thinking
      Douglas Fisher & Nancy Frey
      3 weeks ago

      undefined
      Designing Joyful Learning
      Richard Culatta
      3 weeks ago

      undefined
      Busting the Myth of Equitable Class Discussions
      Matthew R. Kay
      3 weeks ago

      undefined
      Teaching Media Literacy in an Infodemic
      Chris Sperry
      2 months ago
      Related Articles
      Joyful, Better Project-Based Learning
      Bryan Goodwin & Jess Nastasi
      3 weeks ago

      Student-Led Feedback for Critical Thinking
      Douglas Fisher & Nancy Frey
      3 weeks ago

      Designing Joyful Learning
      Richard Culatta
      3 weeks ago

      Busting the Myth of Equitable Class Discussions
      Matthew R. Kay
      3 weeks ago

      Teaching Media Literacy in an Infodemic
      Chris Sperry
      2 months ago
      From our issue
      April 2022 Feedback for Impact thumbnail
      Feedback for Impact
      Go To Publication