Beautiful Questions in the Classroom: Transforming Classrooms Into Cultures of Curiosity and Inquiry

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SAGE Publications Incorporated, 2020 - Education - 208 pages
"Why does student engagement and motivation seem to plummet as learners advance in school? Why does the constant stream of questions from curious toddlers slow to barely a trickle as they become teenagers? And moreover, what can teachers and schools do to repair this alarming trend? A More Beautiful Question in the Classroom (tentative title, subject to change) will be based on Berger's best-selling book, A More Beautiful Question. It expands upon some of the concepts at the heart of that book-exploring the critical importance of questioning; the often-surprising ways inquiry leads directly to learning, innovation, and personal growth; and the ways that students can become better, more effective questioners. Teachers' questioning skills are important - but teaching cannot end there. Great teachers not only ask great questions, but also help their students ask bigger, more beautiful questions. The book is intended to be inspirational, rallying educators around a mission of transforming classrooms into cultures of curiosity and inquiry. But it will also be highly practical, filled with real-world examples and cases studies that illustrate simple, proven ways to bring more questioning into classrooms. Throughout the book, there will be lesson plans, classroom exercises, and step-by-step teaching strategies-all designed to provide a strong foundation that educators can immediately apply to their daily lives as teachers and leaders"--

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About the author (2020)

Warren Berger is the creator of the popular website AMoreBeautifulQuestion.com and author of The Book of Beautiful Questions: The Powerful Questions That Will Help You Decide, Create, Connect, and Lead (Bloomsbury, 2018) and A More Beautiful Question: The Power of Inquiry to Spark Breakthrough Ideas (Bloomsbury, 2014)--all focusing on the power of inquiry to improve your daily life. Before focusing on questioning, Warren wrote the internationally acclaimed Glimmer: How Design Can Transform Business and Your Life (Penguin Press, 2009), published in several editions worldwide. Business Week named Glimmer one of the "Best Innovation & Design Books of the Year."Warren writes for a wide variety of publications, including Fast Company and Harvard Business Review, and was a longtime contributor at Wired magazine and The New York Times.He has appeared on NBC's Today, ABC's World News Tonight, and CNN, and as an expert on NPR's All Things Considered. As a speaker, Warren has keynoted at the Oracle Connect Conference, the Cusp Conference, the Fuse Conference, the Design Thinkers Conference, and the International Women's Forum in Rome. He has spoken about questioning, and conducted questioning workshops, with the NASA Space Center, the U.S. Army, General Electric, Starbucks, Microsoft, Disney, and many other organizations. The education world has particularly embraced the power of questioning. He has been a guest lecturer at the University of Virginia, the University of Oregon, University of South Carolina, Bowling Green State College, New York's School of Visual Arts, and Virginia Commonwealth University, where he gave the 2011 commencement address for graduating business students. Elise Foster is a leadership coach who enables education and industry leaders to tap into capability and unlock potential inside their organizations. She has conducted significant research in the field of leadership within education systems and is coauthor of The Multiplier Effect: Tapping the Genius Inside Our Schools. She has a deep passion for helping leaders become better equipped to navigate the increasingly complex demands of work and life. She works with leaders to make lasting change, by uncovering and making sense of the underlying beliefs preventing them from fully realizing their personal leadership vision. She has found that often, if not always, curiosity and the art of asking questions are central to making progress in the areas of leadership, innovation, and change. Elise has had the privilege of sharing the research and ideas behind multiplier leadership with school leaders at national conferences, such as the conference of the National Association of Elementary School Principals; local districts, including Gwinnett County Public Schools and Chicago Public Schools; and universities, including the Harvard Graduate School of Education and Arizona State University. When she is not working with education or industry leaders, she delights in learning alongside her school-age daughter and her daughter's classmates as a classroom volunteer and Girl Scout leader. She has taught and coached students at Indiana University (Kelley School of Business) and as a management fellow at Harvard University. She holds bachelor's and master's degrees in engineering from Virginia Tech and a master's in education from Harvard University.

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