Preparing students for a world where questioning is a survival skill

by | Kids and Education

If you want a practical reason as to why we should be teaching kids to question, well, let’s look to the world of high-tech. The leaders of Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, and a number of other leading companies are known as consummate questioners who constantly ask, Why should we settle for this? and What if we try something different? A number of the top executives in Silicon Valley were educated in Montessori schools, where their curiosity was given room to roam at a young age.

This has served them well in today’s dynamic tech market—because their well-honed questioning skills help them analyze and solve problems, adapt to change, identify fresh opportunities, and lead companies in new directions.

Indeed, asking the right question is often the starting point of innovation. In writing my book, A More Beautiful Question, I traced the origins of many breakthrough inventions and “disruptive” business start-ups—everything from the making of the cell phone to the birth of the internet, along with the launches of the companies Netflix, Nest, and Dropbox—and found that each began with a person pursuing an insightful question no one else was asking at the time. The questions led to answers that, eventually, have led to billion-dollar paydays. It has been said that, in Silicon Valley today, “questions are the new answers.”

Are our schools doing a good job of preparing students for a world where questioning is a survival skill?

If anything, the ability to ask insightful questions will be even more critical tomorrow than it is today. As change continues to accelerate, tomorrow’s leaders—and the larger workforce—will have to keep learning, updating and adapting what they know, inventing and re-inventing their own jobs and careers through constant, ongoing inquiry.

Given all of this, it’s worth asking: Are our schools doing a good job of preparing students for a world where questioning is a survival skill? Data on student question-asking, gathered by the National Center for Education Statistics, is not encouraging. It shows question-asking declines steadily throughout the school years [PDF of the report]. Interestingly, a separate study from Gallup shows that “student engagement” is dropping at about the same alarming rate as questioning.

A number of factors may contribute to a decline in questioning-asking. As kids mature and begin to “know” more, it’s understandable they might feel less need to ask. But Harvard University education professor Paul Harris points out that young children also seem to feel less safe asking questions as they move from being at home with parents to being in a classroom with a teacher and other kids.

It doesn’t help that in many classrooms, there’s little encouragement—and almost no teaching—of questioning. Tony Wagner, an expert in residence at Harvard’s Innovation Lab (and a former schoolteacher himself), reports that in his observation of classrooms, the message from teachers is, “‘We don’t have time for student questions—because that will take time away from the number of answers I have to cover.’” This is not to suggest teachers are happy with this situation; as one California high school teacher lamented to The New York Times, “I have so many state standards I have to teach concept-wise, it takes away time from what I find most valuable—which is to have [students] inquire about the world.”

To make matters worse, peer pressure may also be inhibiting student questioning. Jack Andraka—who, at age 16, developed a breakthrough new way to screen for cancer—is an incredibly curious young man, but even he doesn’t ask many questions in class, he told me. Andraka says the teachers at his high school aren’t particularly welcoming of his questions, and beyond that, among most students it’s seen as “uncool” to ask questions in class.

ASKING MORE QUESTIONS

There are no easy solutions to this multi-part problem, but if we want kids to question more—and as Einstein told us, the way to get to better questions is by asking more questions—then we may need to find ways to make the act of questioning both “safe” and “cool.”  The Right Question Institute, a nonprofit group focused on teaching questioning in schools, encourages teachers to run group exercises dedicated entirely to formulating questions. RQI has observed, and teachers using the program back this up, that when you actually allow and encourage questioning in this way, students tend to be more comfortable and willing to ask questions—and some even take pride in the questions they ask.

As for making questioning cool? Here’s a thought: Teachers might try pointing out all the “cool stuff” that has resulted from questioning. Those smartphones kids love, and many of the apps on the phones? They only happened because someone was willing to question the status quo. Indeed, kids should know that the true innovators in art, music, even sports—everyone from Beyonce to Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid—are often those willing and able to ask “Why not?” and “What if?” You don’t have to be Einstein to understand that this aptitude for questioning is, itself, a pretty cool “app”—and one worth figuring out how to use.


The above article, “Why It’s Imperative to Teach Students How to Question as the Ultimate Survival Skill,” originally ran in the inspiring Mind/Shift blog run by Tina Barseghian for KQED/NPR.


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