1 / 11

Ladders of Questioning

Ladders of Questioning. Types of Questions. Literal Factual Address key elements Interpretive Inferential Motive of author or a character Experience-Based Connecting Link text to prior knowledge, other texts, or experiences. Level 1: Literal. Questions Factual Address key elements

tehya
Download Presentation

Ladders of Questioning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ladders of Questioning

  2. Types of Questions • Literal • Factual • Address key elements • Interpretive • Inferential • Motive of author or a character • Experience-Based • Connecting • Link text to prior knowledge, other texts, or experiences

  3. Level 1: Literal • Questions • Factual • Address key elements • Answers • Found directly in text • Good answers lead to an accurate and complete summary of text

  4. Level 2: Interpretive • Questions • Inferential • Motive of author or a character • Answers • Found by following patterns and seeing relationships among parts of the text • Good answers lead to an identification of the significant patterns

  5. Level 3: Experience-Based • Questions • Connecting • Link text to prior knowledge, other texts, or experiences • Answers • Found by testing the ideas of a text against readers’ schema • Good answers lead to an appreciation of the text and further discussion an internal representation of the world; an organization of concepts and actions that can be revised by new information about the world 

  6. Example: “Marigolds” • Level 1 • Describe Lizabeth’s actions in this scene. • What are the meanings of the words “sterility,” “verve,” and “poignancy”? • How is Miss Lottie described? • What sense words are used to describe the marigold garden? • What does Lizabeth do right after she destroys the flowers?

  7. Example: “Marigolds” • Level 1 – English 10 Questions

  8. Example: “Marigolds” • Level 2 • Why do you think the narrator destroyed the marigolds? • Why is Lizabeth unable to stop her actions? • Why did Miss Lottie so tendery care for the marigolds? • Why had Lizabeth’s understanding of Miss Lottie changed? • How do you interpret the last line of the story? • Can you identify any stylistic devices? How do they add to the meaning of the story?

  9. Example: “Marigolds” • Level 2 – English 10 Questions

  10. Example: “Marigolds” • Level 3 • Can you think of a time when your anger got out of control? What were the consequences of your behavior? • Have you had an experience that changed your perception of another person? (i.e. divorce, failures, sickness) id est (Latin for "that is")

  11. Example: “Marigolds” • Level 3 – English 10 Questions

More Related