Children go to school as question marks and leave school as periods." (Neil Postman) and "Good Learning starts with questions not answers." (Guy Claxton) these are two quotations which deal with effective questioning to children inside the [ classroom. Many teachers have been observed by education supervisors, district supervisors, principals, and department heads to have asked mostly "what" questions in the entire session or class. Perhaps they were all answered by the pupils; since, the questions were all simple recall. But the big question is, has the teacher helped develop the children's' thinking skills. According to Webster Dictionary, a question is any sentence which has an interrogative form. It can be answerable by yes or no or by other information. In the classroom settings, teacher questions are defined as instructional cues or stimuli that convey to students the content elements to be learned and directions for what they are to do and how they are to do it. The teacher must always put in mind that the knowledge and skills used in asking different types of questions in a classroom is one important but critical aspect of the teaching and learning process. Why are questions important? Questions play an important role not only for teachers but also for students, meaning both in the teaching and learning process, questions are significant factors because childrens' achievement and their level of engagement, depend on the types of questions teachers' formulate and use in a classroom(Keiry, 2002). Therefore, teachers must be careful in designing/ formulating questions to stimulate curiosity, provoke ideas, clarify concepts and challenge beliefs. Students develop their listening and thinking skills when exposed to the right set of questions. It is vital therefore for teachers to assess their current questioning techniques.
i dont know the answer...plzz help me guys
i dont know the answer...plzz help me guys
I'm not sure I understand your question. What phrase are you asking about, "children for school?" If that is what you mean, it could be correct depending on how it is used in the sentence. For example, a sentence such as "We must prepare the children for school." would be correct. If you make your question a bit clearer I could help more.
French children have 6 periods in high school
They didn't have school in the modern sense, rendering the question pointless.
i think that the school should be adding time to the school periods
It's not what they can do "to" it's what they can do "for". The PTO has no authority to discipline school children, if that is the intent of this question.
what f****** kind of question is that
there are four periods in basketball
they dont go to school so that is a dumb question, run a lap.
Answer this question…Children must behave
No. The sentence should be written "Where is your children's school?" A plural that does not end in the letter "s" requires "'s" to form its possessive case, whereas a plural ending in "s" required only the apostrophe.