Text-Based and Knowledge Based Questioning by Children
- 1 September 1992
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Cognition and Instruction
- Vol. 9 (3) , 177-199
- https://doi.org/10.1207/s1532690xci0903_1
Abstract
Three studies investigated the ability of elementary school children to ask and recognize educationally productive questions. Knowledge-based questions formulated in advance of instruction were found to be of a higher order than text-based questions produced after exposure to text materials. Depending on familiarity of the topic, knowledge-based questions varied between basic questions asking for information needed for orientation to a topic and "wonderment" questions often aimed at explanation or at resolving discrepancies in knowledge. Children's questions are seen as a potentially valuable resource in education but one that requires a different kind of classroom community from the several kinds commonly found. The potential of a computer-based medium, computer-supported intentional learning environments, for supporting a knowledge-building community is briefly considered.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Communities of Learning and Thinking, or A Context by Any Other NamePublished by S. Karger AG ,2015
- Questioning in Classrooms: A Sociolinguistic PerspectiveReview of Educational Research, 1991
- Opportunities for Research on the Organizational Impact of School ComputersEducational Researcher, 1990
- Concepts, Kinds, and Cognitive DevelopmentPublished by MIT Press ,1989
- Computer-Supported Intentional Learning EnvironmentsJournal of Educational Computing Research, 1989
- Curriculum materials, teacher talk and student learning: case studies in fifth grade science teaching∗Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1987
- Constructive Interaction and the Iterative Process of UnderstandingCognitive Science, 1986
- Self-Questioning Instructional Research: A ReviewReview of Educational Research, 1985
- Interestingness: Controlling inferencesArtificial Intelligence, 1979
- To ask a question, one must know enough to know what is not knownJournal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1979