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The results of your research should be more than just a regurgitation of the facts or a summary of other people’s ideas. They should be based on new ideas, explanation, analysis, and evaluation. The best way to ensure that your work is thoughtful and original is to pose an essential question and supporting questions for inquiry once you decide on a topic of study. Essential questions have certain qualities: |
Examples of essential questions: |
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Supporting questions: Supporting questions work with the essential question to provide background and guide the work on a particular unit of study. They tend to be more topic- and subject-specific. They provide subject- and topic-specific doorways to essential questions. Unit questions frame a specific set of inquiries; they are designed to point to and uncover the essential question through the lens Examples of supporting questions: Unit questions that guide inquiry for the essential question:
Other supporting questions that may provide background information for that essential question are:
Use Ciardiello's categories as a guideline for writing the supporting questions. Consider writing questions from each of the four categories to cover the spectrum of higher-level thought on your topic. In order for your research paper to be more than a game of Trivial Pursuit™ you must critically and creatively process the information you find. By turning your topic into an an essential question and asking good supporting questions, you are ensuring that your results show evidence of original and inventive ideas based upon logical conclusions and thorough research. |
Bibliography: McKenzie, Jamie. Beyond Technology: Questioning, Research, and the Information Literate School. Bellingham, WA: FNO Press, 2000. Wiggins, Grant and McTighe, Jay. Understanding by Design. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 1998. |
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Copyright 2002, St. Andrew's Episcopal School, Austin, TX Created by Barbara A. Jansen, Librarian/Technology Coordinator, Upper School. Modified by Marina High School with permission 01/25/2005. |