11

Lesson 11 of 20 ยท Questioning & Curiosity

Challengebeginner

Question Chains

What You'll Learn

๐Ÿง  Start with one question. The answer leads to another question, which leads to another. Here's how to do it: 1. Look carefully at the problem. What do you see? 2. Think about what you already know. Does this remind you of something? 3. Try an answer! It's totally okay to be wrong โ€” that's how we learn. 4. Check: did it work? If not, try something else! You're building your thinking muscles. The more you practice, the stronger they get!

Key Concept: Building questions on questions

๐ŸŽญ

Think About This

๐Ÿ  You're helping at home and you use building questions on questions to solve a problem. What happened? How did you figure it out?

Thinking Steps

๐Ÿ”

๐Ÿ‘€ What Do I See?

Look at the problem about building questions on questions. What do you notice?

๐Ÿงช

๐Ÿค” What Do I Know?

What do you already know that could help? Have you seen something like this before?

๐ŸŽฏ

๐Ÿ’ก What's My Idea?

Think of an answer. Can you think of a second one too?

๐Ÿชž

โญ What Did I Learn?

Check your answer. Was it right? What did you figure out? Tell someone!

Key Points

1

Master building questions on questions

2

Apply questioning & curiosity in real situations

3

Build habits of questioning & curiosity

Key Vocabulary

Curious

Wanting to find out about things

Question

Something you ask to learn more

๐ŸŒ

Why This Matters in Real Life

Grown-ups use questioning curiosity every day in their jobs. The practice you're doing now builds skills that last a lifetime!

Talk About It

Discuss these questions with a friend, parent, or classmate.

  • 1Can you explain building questions on questions to a friend using your own words?
  • 2What was the most interesting thing you learned today?
  • 3Draw a picture of what you learned and show it to someone!

Check Your Understanding

Question 1

1 of 3

What is the main idea of building questions on questions?