Saturday, November 12, 2016

Inquiry Based Instruction - A Reflection

What is education? What is the goal of education? John Dewey was a harsh critic of educational paradigms that relied on the transmission of facts as educational goals. He believed that education was a mechanism of social change and as Paulo Freire incisively declared in "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," a "means by which men and women can participate in the transformation of the world" (the quote is often attributed to Paulo Freire but is actually attributable to Richard Shaull in his introduction of Freire's work "Pedagogy of the Oppressed).


So if education is not merely the transmission of facts, what is it and as teachers what is our role? That is a difficult question to answer, and as with most difficult questions there is no one right answer. That being said, there are many approaches to teaching which I believe come close to some of the ideals that great minds such as Dewey and Freire had imagined.

Inquiry based instruction is a process in which the instructor facilitates a learning experience that is directed by the student. It is based on the scientific method, namely: making observations, formulating hypotheses, developing testable predictions, experimenting, gathering data, and making conclusions which is followed by a scholarly peer review.

I know when we hear scientific method our minds are filled with images or thoughts of scientists in white lab coats pouring colorful liquids into test tubes or Doc from "Back to the Future," however, that is a very narrow perspective of "science" and a paradigm that we need to change if we want to encourage students to be excited about science. Stated simply, science is a systematic way of finding answers to questions that we have and you probably use the scientific methods unconsciously everyday.


















Although I have very limited experience with inquiry based instruction, I recognize that more than helping student discover new things, it is about helping them through the process of discovering new things. In other words, it is about the process as opposed to the output. What is really powerful about inquiry based instruction is that learners learn how to learn! To be a lifelong learner you have to learn how to learn and learn effectively. And that is what inquiry based instruction is all about.

No comments:

Post a Comment