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Lesson: Categorizing Research Questions
Description
In this lesson, students organize the research questions they previously generated into categories. Categorizing questions engages students in analysis of the content of questions. Generating labels for questions categorized requires students to synthesize information by coming up with labels that describe categories. Additionally, by labeling categories, students identify the big ideas about the topic under study. This provides a graphic organizer in their mind to which they will add the myriad of facts they will gather during their research.
Learning Outcomes I Suggested Procedure I Assessment for this Lesson
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Materials for this Offline lesson: |
Time allotment: 45 - 50 minutes Grade Level: Grade 2 - 12 Information Literacy Standard: 6. The student who is an independent learner is Information literate and strives for excellence in Information-seeking and knowledge generation. |
Students will be able to categorize questions by topic.
Students will label the topics for each category.
Set-up
Grades 2 through 5
Tell students that they did a great job of generating questions. You counted
over 60 questions. The problem is what to do with all these questions? Any suggestions?
Students will generally come up with the notion that the questions need to be
organized.
| Ask the students which method they think would be best to organize the questions. While you want students to ultimately decide to categorize questions by content, students may not initially decide on that method. Usually the older the students (4th - 5th grade and above) will choose this method. Younger students may choose to organize them by alphabetical order, by type of question, or by what the question starts with. Allow students to make these choices and begin categorization. Usually after categorizing just a few questions students will recognize that organizing the questions in this manner does not yield the kind of results they want. |
| Students will take ownership of this process. They will approach charts and discuss with others what they think belongs or does not belong in categories. It is a good idea to record some of these conversations because it is a testament to students higher order thinking. |
Grades 6 through 12
The process enumerated above can be shortened for students who have categorizing knowledge. Students in upper grades with experience in categorizing can break into cooperative groups to categorize questions.
Categorizing research questions requires students to analyze information and synthesize that information into new knowledge to be used. This new knowledge becomes the graphic organizer or the organizational schematic in the student's brain with which the student can categorize and store new data/information as it is gathered. As the teacher guides this initial learning experience, he/she is also assessing those students who can analyze and synthesize information and those who cannot. As the teacher repeats this process throughout the year, an important assessment component is to see which of those students who, during the initial categorizing experience, could not analyze and synthesize information, can now do so.
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This page was
last updated February 19, 2002 This lesson was created to support the AT&T/UCLA Initiatives for the 21st Century Literacies. Categorizing Research Questions was created by Sharon Sutton |