The 5 Clue Challenge is a series of short videos that give you 5 clues to guess a location, an animal or a person. Some videos are created by teachers, others by students, Your mission is to do research and figure out the answer to each challenge in as few clues as possible.....and perhaps even to create your own. Ils n'en ont pas encore en français. Un défi!?
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Learn more about the research behind technology rich inquiry by reading this blog. Diane Kashin is currently teaching at Ryerson University in Toronto and is the chair of the York Region Nature Collaborative.
It is increasingly common practice to drive a journey of inquiry through a ‘big question’. This document offers a number of sample inquiry questions that can inspire you and your students.
A provocation can be a beautiful set up, an image, a GIF, a picture book, an activity, a video clip, a field trip, materials, a nature walk, etc. to spark curiosities around and about an inquiry topic or idea. Read this article to learn more about how to use provocations in your classroom.
Natural Curiosity is a book that focuses on bringing inquiry into the classroom. The resource offers elementary school teachers a guide to making both the content and process of learning about the world more engaging and relevant to their students. Click on the image above to access the pdf version.
Cliquez sur l'image pour avoir accès au livre en français! A unit developed by Adrienne Gear titled We Are All Connected. This unit was shared on the BCTLA website. It includes Reading Power strategies throughout the unit and introduces concepts of aboriginal themes to students through picture books. Each week two books are compared. Please be mindful that these books are not from a Yukon First Nations perspective.
Trevor Mackenzie is a BC teacher that has written Dive Into Inquiry: Amplify Learning and Empower Student Voice. In this blog post, he shares the beginning of an inquiry that he is completing with his high school English students. The essential questions is: Who are you? What shapes your identity?
Janice Novakowski is a math teacher helper in Richmond, BC. This is her blog where she posts many resources that she has shared with teachers in her district. I have learned a lot about how to easily include inquiry and provocations from Janice's work.
This page offers primary teachers some great provocations to access students spatial reasoning. Open ended questions that can motivate students to engage in hands on learning!
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