Inquiry and Writing Boyer Commission Report “The idea embodied in this report would turn the prevailing culture of receivers into a culture of inquirers, a culture in which faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates share an adventure of discovery…The first year university experience needs to provide new stimulation for intellectual growth and a firm grounding in inquiry-based learning.” The Boyer Commission Report, 1998 Characteristics of Inquiry-based Assignments Are driven by questions, and teach what constitutes a good question. Put students in charge of their own investigations. Engage students’ curiosity. Initially encourage uncertainty. Emphasize exploration before judgment, and allow time in the process for open-ended investigation. Complicate prior beliefs about learning and knowledge. Celebrate discovery and surprise. Myth of the Boring Topic No such thing as boring topic, only bad questions Suspend judgment and tolerate ambiguity Extend the process of open inquiry Questions are like knives The more you look the more you see Knowledge is created collaboratively The Inquiry Question What’s a good question? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. It raises more questions; there isn’t a simple answer. It can sustain the process of inquiry over time. The writer is interested in it. Some readers have a stake in the answer. It implies an approach to learning the answer—appropriate subject areas in which to begin looking. 6. Something has been said about the question. 7. It’s the right size. Not too general and not too narrow. Categories of Questions Bruce Ballenger, Professor of English, Boise State University, April 2013 Page 1 Type Questions Genre Question of Fact or Definition What is it? What is known about it? Beginning of inquiry Question of Value Which is better/worse? Is it good/bad Review, Argument, Research Essay Hypothesis Question Might this be true? Research Essay, Personal Essay Policy Question What should be done? Argument, Proposal Interpretation question? What does it mean? Literary Essay, Personal Essay, Ethnography, Profile Relationship Question Does ___ cause ___? Is __similar or dissimilar to ___? Research Essay, Literary Essay, Ethnography Bruce Ballenger, Professor of English, Boise State University, April 2013 Page 2 An Inquiry Strategy Question • Making Judgments • Suspending Judgements Findings Dialogic Thinking Creative Thinking Critical Thinking Sea Fastwriting Showing Specifics Collecting Observations of What happened Then Generating Exploring Seeing Playing Mountain Composing Telling Generalities Focusing Ideas about What happens Now Criticizing Reflecting Interpreting Judging The Impact of Prior Knowledge What should be the focus of instruction, subject knowledge or reasoning strategies? There is some evidence that once a learner develops some expertise in a subject her sophistication in applying Bruce Ballenger, Professor of English, Boise State University, April 2013 Page 3 strategies (e.g. effective reading, question-asking, etc..) increases. Inquiry approaches in composition often invite students to explore subjects about which they may have little prior knowledge. Implications include: Low prior knowledge is stage of high motivation and lessened resistance to learning more. Potential for frustration because of high cognitive load Less skilled in reasoning strategies but with guidance more interested in applying them. More likely to choose interdisciplinary approaches. Cognitive Load Resistance Question-asking Reading Motivation Low Knowledge Moderate Knowledge High Knowledge The Danger of Cognitive Overload The following excerpt is from an essay written by Bernice about her experience in a inquiry-based freshman composition class that used The Curious Researcher. We were skeptical. It all felt very contradictory, this research essay. It seemed like a mythical beast made by taking bits and pieces of genres we knew and putting them together in ways we didn’t know. It had the voice and heart of a personal essay, the backbone of a research paper, and a wild exploratory spirit. I had no idea where to begin with such a paper. In class we talked briefly about beginning by asking question, we drew a few spider graphs, free-wrote, asked question of each other’s topic and then sallied forth into the library. I chose fairy tales and folklore, wrote the first draft about my family folklore. The second draft was a mangled overview of European fairytales, and the finished draft a long winded conversation about Bruce Ballenger, Professor of English, Boise State University, April 2013 Page 4 the affects of fairytales on children. In every draft I diminished, my voice faded in an effort to balance the beast. I got an A but the project left me frustrated and unsure of what makes good research essay. To this day I wish I’d kept and reworked that first draft. What You’re Inclined to Believe Strongly AgreeStrongly Disagree 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 Question 1. There’s a big difference between facts and opinions 2. Most of what you read it books is true. 3. Stories that don’t have an ending or clear conclusion are very good stories. 4. Everybody is entitled to his or her own opinion and you can’t say one opinion is better than another. 5. Most problems have one best solution no matter how difficult they are. 6. How much you get out of school depends on the quality of the teachers. 7. Most words have one clear meaning. 8. When I study I look for specific facts. 9. People who challenge authority are over-confident 10. Scientists can ultimately get to the truth. What You Suspect Your Composition Students Believe Strongly AgreeStrongly Disagree 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 Bruce Ballenger, Professor of English, Boise State University, April 2013 Page 5