Title: Useless Information
1Useless Information
2Information Literacy
- Denise Vodola JaimieLynn Silva Alyson Britt
- WIS Media Specialist Social Studies Language
Arts
3Bottomless Pot
Time to chat
Food for Grazing
And a Killer Lunch
4A G E N D A
- Shift Happens
- Number Connecting Exercise
- Information Literacy
- Movie Clip
- Essential Questions
- Sample Questions/Lessons
- Big6 Introduction
- Web Evaluation Activity
- WebQuests
- Types of questions/Question Brainstormer Activity
5What is Information Literacy? And why should I
care?
- School research is a training ground for real
life. - Information literacy skills are skills you will
need through your life. We are always seeking
information. What car or stereo should I buy?
Which college should I choose? Which book should
I read next? How can I sell this idea to my boss?
How can I convince the school board to act on my
proposal? Information helps us reach conclusions,
make our choices, and communicate more
effectively. But the good stuff is often buried
in heaps of junk. We need to continue to improve
our searching, evaluating and communication
skills in a changing information environment. - Remember computer literacy is not information
literacy.
6Essential Questions
7What are Essential Questions
- "Essential Questions" bring students beyond basic
fact-gathering, and require them to solve a
problem or make a decision. - Definition
- Open-ended with no right or wrong answer
- Important life-affecting questions
8Why Ask Questions?
- Questions allow students to
- Access information
- Analyze information
- Draw Sound Conclusions
- Good questions stimulate thinking and creativity
- What do that mean?
9Attributes of Essential Questions
- Reside at the top of Bloom's Taxonomy (Penthouse)
- Seek an understanding of something which matters
to us, sparking curiosity and wonder. - Answers cannot be found. They must be invented.
Students construct their own answers and make
their own meaning - Essential questions engage students in the kinds
of real life applied problem-solving suggested by
nearly every new curriculum report
10Demanding Questions
- Demanding Questions Serve Daily Practice and
Lesson Planning - Training in essential questions sometimes imposes
a heavy burden on librarians and teachers who are
led to believe they must somehow reach the above
Tests of Significance on each day of 5th Grade
science or 8th Grade social studies. Demanding
questions are a much more reasonable expectation
to apply to daily lesson planning, as the teacher
orchestrates a series of lessons that ultimately
help students to "piece together" answers to unit
questions over a number of days and weeks.
11Teachers Role
- Topical research assignments required little
action on the part of the teacher. It was easy to
fall into assign and mark. - Exploration of exasperating, challenging
questions is an entirely different matter. The
teacher's role is critical
12Curriculum Mapping
- Themes and essential questions help to frame
student inquiry and promote critical thinking.Â
They also provide a helpful framework for
organizing a unit of study using a multi-genre
approach. - Good essential questions have some basic
criteria in common - They are open-ended and resist a simple or single
right answer - They are deliberately thought-provoking,
counterintuitive, and/or controversial - They require students to draw upon content
knowledge and personal experience - They can be revisited throughout the unit to
engage students in evolving dialogue and debate - They lead to other essential questions posed by
students
13Curriculum Map Template
14Grade 5 Sample Map for 1 Month
15The 4th Grade State Report
- Traditionally, the typical State Report was to
find information about the state, the flower,
bird, capital, etc. -
- This assignment leads to information gathering
but little analysis or thought. - Invites Copy-and-Paste plagiarism
164th Grade State Report Take 2
- A new state of California is being created. It is
up to your team to find a new location for the
capitol, a new state flag and song. - Create a persuasive multimedia presentation
convincing your classmates.
17Identifying Subsidiary Questions
- Teams must list smaller questions which will help
them answer their main question. - Effective research results from formulating as
many categories of related questions as possible,
with each category suggesting missing questions.
18Suppositions - Hypothesis
- Before they proceed very far, students list
suppositions, pose hypotheses and make
predictions - many and most of which will be
revised as information is gathered. This thought
process helps to provide a basis for construction
of meaning.
19and listen to the Sounds of Silence. -Paul
Simon http//video.google.com/videoplay?docid
-4843226743390535857qsoundsofsilencetotal255
5start0num10so0typesearchplindex5
20Big Questions
- Many of us fall into the trap of thinking an
essential question is a big question, but that is
not a sufficient or very important quality of an
essential question. - All of the following are big questions that do
not rise to the level of "essential" because they
do not require much more than information-gatherin
g and summarizing. - What happened in World War One?
- What were da Vinci's accomplishments?
- What were Napoleon's Codes?
21Essential Questions
- Those four questions are large in scope but they
do not require thought on the top of Bloom's
Taxonomy and they do not pass the test of "So
What?" They could each be converted into
essential questions by adding a twist that would
require judgment, interpretation, synthesis and
thought. - In what ways did the events of World War One help
set the scene for World War Two? - How did da Vinci's character shape his
contributions? - To what extent do we owe Napoleon a debt of
gratitude as a result of his Codes? - Most essential questions are interdisciplinary in
nature. They usually cut across lines.
22Essential Vs. Demanding
- When is an essential question actually essential?
- When will a demanding question suffice?
23When to ask Essential Questions
- While it is certainly a worthy goal to focus much
student learning around important issues and
questions of great importance, it is probably
unrealistic to impose such high expectations on
daily lesson planning. Essential questions serve
well to organize major units of study, while
demanding questions may better match the
realities and possibilities of daily practice. - Students synthesize their daily work on demanding
questions like jigsaw pieces until a picture
emerges that captures the essence of an essential
(unit) question. - A demanding question requires thought at the top
of Bloom's Taxonomy but need not meet some of the
same tests of significance we apply to essential
questions.
24Essential Question for Elementary Science
Curriculum
- "Which would make the better classroom pet--a
starfish, or a hermit crab?" Explain your reasons
for the decision you have made.
25Essential Question for Elementary Science
Curriculum
- "Which Spider?" Select a spider for a classroom
pet. The spider must be able to survive in an
environment where (supply criteria). - "Which Day?" You will be going on a hike with
your class this week. It's your job to choose
which day this week you will go on the hike. (Use
the Local Weather Forecast on the Internet to
investigate the 5-day forecast and make your
decision.)
26Essential Question for Elementary Social Studies
Curriculum
- "Community Helpers" Your classroom has been
asked to give an award to the most important
community helper. Together, decide which will
receive the award and why they deserve it (Police
Officers, Fire Fighters, Paramedics, Mountain
Rescue, etc.)
27Essential Question for Social Studies Curriculum
- "New State Nickname" You have just been informed
that the Governor of New Jersey is tired of the
old New Jersey State Nickname ("The Garden
State"). He is hiring you to come up with a new
state nickname for New Jersey. He wants the new
nickname to stand for something very special
about the state of New Jersey. - "Choose Your Chief" You have been transported
back in time to the early 1800's. You find that
you have become a Native American of those times.
The Captain of the Time Machine tells you that
you have to live with one of the American Indian
tribes for one year, before he will come back to
pick you up. You need to decide which Indian
Chief you would prefer to live with, as a member
of his tribe, for one year. - "Native Americans' Contributions" What are two
or three beliefs or skills of North American
Indians that are still important in today's
society? How so?
28Essential Question for Science Curriculum
- "Which Dog?" You have been chosen to select a
pet dog for an elderly person a family in
Alaska a family with young children and no
fenced yard
29Essential Question for Social Studies Curriculum
- "Stranded on an Island" If you were stranded on
one of the small, uninhabited islands found in
popular children's' books (Island of the Blue
Dolphins Robinson Crusoe The Cay Call it
Courage), on which island would you most prefer
to be stranded? How would you supply your basic
needs on this island?
30Essential Question for Science Curriculum
- "Displaced Species" You are a member of a team
of zoologists. Your task is to return a displaced
species to a suitable environment somewhere on
the earth. The original environment of this
species has been rendered uninhabitable so your
team must research the needs of your animal, the
original habitat, and possible alternate
habitats. Find one location, on a different
continent, where the species can be reintroduced
successfully. - "Which Fault Line?" You are a geologist who is
currently working for an American land
development company. The company is planning on
building new condominiums at various places in
the United States. Unfortunately, each location
is very near a fault line. You have been asked to
recommend the least risky location, regarding
earthquakes, for the new condos. Which location
will you choose, and why?
31Essential Questions for Social Studies Curriculum
- "1620 Living" You and your team are a group of
children living in either the Jamestown or
Plymouth Colony. After investigating living
conditions in both colonies, decide where you
would have preferred living, in the year 1620. - "New Move" Your parents have just lost their
jobs. Your family is being forced, by necessity,
to move from the West Coast to New England. Your
job is to help your parents decide which New
England city to move to, from the following list
of cities Providence, Rhode Island Burlington,
Vermont Hartford, Connecticut Boston,
Massachusetts Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - "Which Park?" Your classroom has just become a
finalist in a contest sponsored by the National
Geographic Foundation, for outstanding
achievement in the area of geography. Your prize,
if you should win, is an all expense paid, ten
day trip to your favorite National Park site. In
order to win, you must submit a written proposal
to the Geographic board, describing ten different
Parks, their special qualities, and the one you
chose to be the best. Keep in mind that your
entire class must be able to make this trip,
including the two children in wheelchairs. Good
luck!!
32Essential Question for Science Curriculum
- "NASA or NOAA"? You and your team are advisors
to the President of the United States. Your
assignment is to help him determine whether NASA
or NOAA should receive funding. Due to budget
cuts there are only enough monies to adequately
fund one of these programs. Research NASA and
NOAA to find at least 3 important benefits from
each program. Apply the following criteria to
help you choose the program to fund Benefit to
environment Benefit to most people Scientific
gain - "Simple Machines" Which simple machine idea is
most valuable in your life? - "Earth Games on Other Planets" You are the
Interplanetary Recreation Coordinator, hired by
NASA to teach Earth games to inhabitants of the
other planets. How must you adapt Earth games to
the gravitational pull of other planets? - "Operation Rescue" Earth is doomed. Your job, as
a leading NASA scientist, is to organize a
colonization expedition to another planet. The
expedition is limited to 20 people. Identify the
planet and defend your choice. Then identify the
20 people who would be rescued, and tell why you
chose them. Defend your choices.
33Question Brainstormer
Brainstorm two topics related to the unit you are
studying. Use the cues to develop essential
questions that will help students focus their
research. You dont need to fill in every box. We
will be discussing which of the questions you
develop would be the best to research.
34Why Big6?
- We all suffer from information overload. Theres
just too much "stuff" out there, and its not
easy to keep up. At the same time, theres an
ironyyes, we are surrounded by information, but
we can never seem to find what we want, when we
want it, and in a form we want it so that we can
use it effectively. - One solution to the information problemis to
speed things up. We try to pack in more and more
content, to work faster to get more done. But,
this is a losing proposition. Speeding things up
can only work for so long. Instead, we need to
think about helping students to work smarter, not
faster. There is an alternative to speeding
things up. Its the smarter solutionone that
helps students develop the skills and
understandings they need to find, process, and
use information effectively. This smarter
solution focuses on process as well as content.
Some people call this smarter solution
information literacy or information skills
instruction. We call it the Big6.
35Big6 Model
People go through these Big6 stagesconsciously
or notwhen they seek or apply information to
solve a problem or make a decision. Its not
necessary to complete these stages in a linear
order, and a given stage doesnt have to take a
lot of time. Almost all successful
problem-solving situations address all stages.
36What is the Big6?
Developed by educators Mike Eisenberg and Bob
Berkowitz, the Big6 is the most widely-known and
widely-used approach to teaching information and
technology skills in the world. The Big6 is an
information and technology literacy model and
curriculum, implemented in thousands of schools -
K through higher education. Some people call the
Big6 an information problem-solving strategy
because with the Big6, students are able to
handle any problem, assignment, decision or task.
Here are the six stages we call the BIG6. Two
sub-stages are part of each main category in
the BIG6 IPM
37Big6 Model
- Task Definition1.1 Define the information
problem 1.2 Identify information needed - What am I supposed to do?
- What information do I need to do this? (consider
listing in question form)
38Big6 Model
- 2. Information Seeking Strategies
- 2.1 Determine all possible sources
- 2.2 Select the best sources
- Which are the best possible sources I can use?
- Print Sources books, magazines, newspapers,
primary sources, textbooks, maps, other - Technology Internet, on-line databases, DVD,
video, computer program, tv/radio, other - People teachers, parents, experts, peers,
business owners, other - If using web sites, how will I know that they are
good enough for my project? - I will only use those evaluated by and provided
by my teachers. - I will ask my librarian, teacher, or parent for
help in finding good web sites for my project. - How do I evaluate a website?
- Website Evaluation WebQuest
- Follow these links more information on searching
and appropriate internet search tools , more
search tools, our catalog , and licensed
databases.
39Big6 Model
- 3. Location and Access
- 3.1 Locate sources (intellectually and
physically) - 3.2 Find information within sources
- Where will I find these sources?
- School library
- Public library
- Provided by teachers
- Internet
- Other
- Who can help me find what I need?
- I can find the sources myself
- My librarian
- My teachers
- My parents
40Big6 Model
- 4. Use of Information4.1 Engage (e.g., read,
hear, view, touch) 4.2 Extract relevant
information - How will I record the information that I find?
- Take notes using note cards
- Take notes using word processor
- Take notes using data chart/ graphic organizer
- Illustrate concepts
- Record using tape recorder, video, digital
camera - Other
- How will I give credit to my sources?
- Use the guide given to me by teacher
- Use NoodleTools
41Big6 Model
5. Synthesis 5.1 Organize from multiple sources
5.2 Present the information
- How will I show my results?
- Written paper
- Oral presentation
- Multimedia presentation
- Performance
- Other
- How will I give credit to my sources in my final
product? - Include a written bibliography
- After the performance or presentation, announce
which sources used - Other
42Big6 Model
- 6. Evaluation6.1 Judge the product
(effectiveness) 6.2 Judge the process
(efficiency) - How will I know if I have done my best?
- Before turning in my assignment, I need to check
off all of these items - What I created to finish the assignment is
appropriate for what I was supposed to do Big6 1 - The information I found in Big6 4 matches the
information needed in Big6 1 - Credit is given to all of my sources, written in
the way my teacher requested - My work is neat
- My work is complete and includes heading
information - I would be proud for anyone to view this work
43WebQuests
- A Strategy for Scaffolding Higher Level Learning
- Bernie Dodge, Ed Tech Department, San Diego
State University - Definition
- Inquiry-oriented
- Based on a doable, engaging task
- Uses pre-defined resources from the Web (and
others) - Can be short or long term
- Â Parts
- Introduction
- Task
- Process
- Resources
- Evaluation
- Conclusion
- Â Underpinnings
- Constructivism
- Cooperative Learning
- Scaffolding
- Fading
44Sample Quests
- http//www.bcpl.net/sullivan/modules/eastasia/ind
ex.html - http//www.bcpl.net/sullivan/modules/midrenn/inde
x.html - http//www.bcpl.net/sullivan/modules/apartheid/in
dex.html - http//www.bcpl.net/sullivan/modules/diseases/ind
ex.html - http//www.bcpl.net/sullivan/modules/holocaust/in
dex.html - http//jeffcoweb.jeffco.k12.co.us/elem/kendallvue/
Church/Webquest/SSWebQuest.htm - http//www.questgarden.com/13/59/8/060110130600/
45Calvin Hobbes
- I used to hate writing assignments, but now I
enjoy them. I realized that the purpose of
writing is to inflate weak ideas, obscure poor
reasoning, and inhibit clarity. With a little
practice, writing can be an intimidating and
impenetrable fog!
46Question Types Level 1Memory
- Memory level questions are those to which you
will most likely find answers in sources such as
books, web sites, and other reference materials.
Asking this type of question provides background
for the subject. These questions bring forth
simple reproduction of facts, formulae, or other
items of remembered content. - Thought processes involved while asking and
answering these questions are naming, defining,
identifying, designating, or giving yes/no
responses. - Memory questions usually begin with these words
- Who...
- What...
- Where...
- When...
- Examples of memory questions
- When did Richard III reign?
- What games were played during the ancient Greek
Olympics? - Who developed the planetary model of the atom?
- Where is ____ on a map?
-
- Based on Ciardiello, Angelo. (1998). "Did you
ask a good question today? Alternative cognitive
and metacognitive strategies." Journal of
Adolescent Adult Literacy. 42, 210-219. Used
and modified with permission, 2003.
47Question Types Level 2Convergent Thinking
- Convergent thinking questions are those which
represent the - analysis and integration of given or remembered
information. They - lead you to an expected end result or answer.
- Thought processes involved while asking and
answering these questions are explaining, stating
relationships, and comparing and contrasting. -
- Convergent thinking questions usually begin with
these words or phrases - Why
- How
- In what ways...
-
- Examples of convergent thinking questions
- How does gravity differ from electrostatic
attraction? - How was the invasion of Grenada a modern day
example of the Monroe Doctrine in action? - Why was Richard III considered an evil king?
- In what ways does Roman drama compare to the
heroic epics of Indian literature? -
48Question Types Level 3Divergent Thinking
49Question Types Level 4Evaluative Thinking
50Big 6 an Information Problem-Solving Strategy
Mike Eisenberg and Bob Berkowitz
51The More Things Change