1. How did you get here?
2. Same and Different
3. Coaching Questions
Think about the internal monologue you have if you are trying to solve a puzzle or do a calculation at a level that is tricky for you. The rhythm of that monologue, even if you don’t always articulate every word in your head, is probably question-answer, question-answer. As relative expert, you already have a repertoire of questions to ask yourself to push your thinking along, pursue one approach, try another. Part of the purpose and power of oracy work is to create opportunities for dialogue with others that can later be the foundation for a richer internal monologue when facing similar problems. To help this process along, it’s a good idea to provide coaching questions for use in paired problem-solving talk. For example:
Can we say what this question is asking?
Can we spot anything important in the numbers?
How might we start this one together?
Can we think of more than one way?
Does this look similar to something we’ve done before?
Can we check if our answer makes sense?
What might happen if we changed one number?
Can we explain why our method works?
Do we both agree, or see it differently?
Can we show this another way, like a diagram?
You’ll notice that, like any good coaching questions, these can be used for a range of situations and they provide prompts for thinking rather than smuggling in answers. You can use this prompt to create custom questions for particular year groups and topics - just paste it in to your AI of choice, filling in the […] placeholders appropriately. It will generate ten questions from which I suggest you pick the five or six best and transfer to a powerpoint slide - overgenerate and select is usually the way to go with AI.
https://chatgpt.com/share/69cba5dd-5a70-8387-ac12-ffa57b6180bf
4. Strategic Stupidity
If you’ve ever taught instructional writing, you may have enjoyed the wicked fun of following students’ instructions to make a jam sandwich to the letter- here’s a great example: https://www.facebook.com/reel/565172732753319 You can generalise this approach into “Strategic Stupidity” - turning the tables so that the students become the experts and you become very, very dim and obtuse and only do exactly as you are told, or misunderstand everything that is not expressed in crystal clear terms. Essentially, you’re a robot that has missed out on an important bit of programming and it’s their job to fill you in.
In mathematics, this might translate to you “forgetting” a mathematical concept or process and then asking the class in pairs to explain it to one another before you follow their instructions to the letter, making any mistakes that looseness in their expression permits. Require them to be very precise, and to explain the terms they are using, in order for them to guide you to a successful outcome. This strategy works because it is a fun way of forcing precise, ordered articulation of mathematical thinking.