Can you create a good question? The art of asking a good question was
the road to literacy and success for centuries and that rings even more
true today. Or does it? This session will rise above that as Paul Kim
will be asking you for a “better” question or a “great” question, not
just a good one. But what does asking a great question entail? SMILE (Stanford Mobile Inquiry-based Learning Environment) elevates the level of questions generated and evaluated. (More on SMILE; video, Stanford SMILE pi).
My blog post for Silver Lining for
Learning: Episode 08: Rethinking Education with Great Questions, May 6, 2020.
For those who missed the show last Saturday May 8th in Silver Lining for Learning with Paul Kim here is the link to Episode 8 (video: 1 hour, 4 minutes): https://youtu.be/beHIZ620HzY. Topics addressed included "Alien Pedagogy," guided-discovery learning, game-based learning, mobile learning, culturally sensitive and inclusive instruction, building learning ecologies, designing interactivity in MOOCs, using social media to enhance learning, project and problem-based learning, AI-based question generation and evaluation, higher-order thinking. etc. Besides that, not much in an hour. :-)
What a great show! See pics below.
This session was co-hosted by Punya Mishra from Arizona State University and Chris Dede from Harvard University.
As you can see, it was informative and fun.
We
stream it live each week from Zoom to YouTube:
Labels: alien pedagogy, mobile learning, Paul Kim, question asking, Silver Lining for Learning, SMILE, Stanford Mobile Inquiry-based Learning Environment |