Thursday, January 16, 2020
An Inventory Helps to Promote Higher Order Thinking
One of the issues I hear from many of you is the problem we encounter when students do not do the assigned reading prior to class. It certainly creates multiple teaching and learning problems and can really stifle the entire class. One of the suggestions I have made to help alleviate this problem is to have an "As You Come Into Class" question(s) on the board. In that way, as they are getting settled and I am checking attendance, they can be thinking more deeply about some of the things I plan to discuss in class. It helps to alleviate those "top of mind" responses that are usually anecdotal and totally off-topic. I also want to suggest something that Karen Harris uses in her classes. Her learning outcome is focused on having students use higher order critical thinking. She describes her teaching experience as a thinking inventory. Harris says, "Although a thinking inventory is made up of questions, it’s more than
a questionnaire. When we say we’re “taking inventory”—whether we’re in a
warehouse or a relationship—we mean we’re taking stock of where things
stand at a given moment in time, with the understanding that those
things are fluid and provisional. With a thinking inventory, we’re
taking stock of students’ thinking, experiences, and sense-making at the
beginning of the course. A well-designed thinking inventory formalizes the essential questions
of any course and serves as a touchpoint for both teacher and students
throughout that course." You can read the details of her inventory here. Students are engaged by learning that can be tied to real life. Assuring them that being able to think critically and offer the best solution in the workplace will always benefit them is the go to answer for how this relates to real-world situations.