Types of Inquiry
Types of Inquiry
Inquiry teaching only works if teachers hold a few foundational beliefs about students and learning. It matters more today than ever because facts now change faster than textbooks can print them. Once the conceptual foundation is in place, the natural next step is Models of Inductive Inquiry, which shows how to plan and run a guided inquiry unit.
Seven things teachers must believe and do to make inquiry teaching work in their classrooms
The origin of memorization, why facts change in the information age, and the difference between data and useful knowledge
Eight different aspects of inquiry, information inquiry’s five components, graphic inquiry examples, and assimilation as the central skill
The two models of inductive inquiry, the teacher’s different role in each, and how to plan effective inductive inquiry
Last updated on • Talha