In this exercise/activity, students work on their own and in groups to generate and evaluate questions and claims based on their observations or notes from an outside-of-class learning experience.
Objective
To turn students’ observations into claims and questions; to evaluate stronger and weaker questions/claims; to plan for an essay using students’ own observations as a key source.
Key Terms
claims; questions; experiential learning; place-based learning
I. Before Class: Solo Work
After you return from your outside-the-classroom experience and before you return to class, read through your notes to prepare for discussions in class.
- Write down or highlight points in the notes that document moments you found particularly surprising or striking.
- Formulate and write questions about what you observed.
- Move through your whole set of notes and write any patterns or trends you identify that you think may be significant.
- Write comments about how your observations may be related to other course materials and previous class discussions.
II. Group Activity: Generating and Evaluating Potential Questions from Observations
- After you get into groups, one of you should make a Google doc through his or her BU email account and then share that doc with your group members and your instructor.
- All group members should share the highlights from their notes that they prepared.
- In your group Google doc, work together to come up with five different questions that could lead to potential claims/arguments. Work together as a group to discuss, develop, and refine each of the five questions.
- As a group, read through your five finished questions from the in-class activity. Choose one that you think is the most likely to lead to a strong, arguable claim. Copy and paste that question to the class Google doc that your instructor will share with all the groups.
- As you read through the posted questions in the class Google doc, use your original group Google doc to respond to each of the other groups’ questions through the checklist below.
- Are you fairly sure you understand the question or are there aspects that seem unclear? Is there phrasing that could be revised to make a clearer question?
- Using the question as originally phrased (and not your revision if you created one) collaborate to develop a working claim based on course topics for a paper of the length that you have been assigned. Look at your working claim and figure out a counterargument you would need to acknowledge.
- If you have extreme difficulty developing an arguable claim and cannot do so, write a few sentences explaining why coming up with a claim was difficult. Was it due to the structure of the question? What aspects of the structure? The content of the question? Some other reason?
- What strategies for evaluating and developing questions and claims do you notice from the process of looking at each question and creating (or not creating!) each claim?
- Move through the rest of the questions in the class Google doc and respond to the three questions above for each one.
III. After Class: Solo Work
Focusing back on your notes, find material that you highlighted in order to brainstorm a working question and claim for your upcoming place-based argument.
- Consider how some of the points you chose as particularly surprising or striking could suggest a trend on which you could focus a question and claim.
- Look through the initial questions you formulated and consider whether any of them or a combination of them could be shaped into a question that could lead to a claim.
- Look back at your notes about course materials and choose a specific quotation or central concept that you think you could respond to through a question and claim focused on details from your observations.
- After developing your working question and claim, evaluate it based on the criteria and strategies the class discovered through the in-class activity.