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Level 1,2,3 Questioning

Level 1,2,3 Questioning. Critical Thinking. “Right There” Questions. Right There questions ask you to respond at the literal level The words used to formulate the answer to the question can be found “right there” in the text/visual. “Right There” Questions. Examples:

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Level 1,2,3 Questioning

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  1. Level 1,2,3 Questioning Critical Thinking

  2. “Right There” Questions • Right There questions ask you to respond at the literal level • The words used to formulate the answer to the question can be found “right there” in the text/visual

  3. “Right There” Questions • Examples: • Who wrote the Constitution of the United States? • What was the Underground Railroad? • What are the causes of World War I?

  4. “Think and Search” Questions • Think and Search questions require you to think about how the information or ideas in the text relate to each other • You may need to search the entire passage to find the information that answers the question

  5. “Think and Search” Questions • Examples: • Describe the role of the three branches of government. • Compare and contrast a command economy and a market economy. • Summarize the military strategies used by Grant and Sherman during the Civil War.

  6. “On My Own” Questions • On My Own questions can be answered with information from your background knowledge or from another source • These questions are much more open-ended and go beyond the text

  7. “On My Own” Questions • Examples: • Should the national government pay for healthcare for all its citizens? • In your opinion, what is the legacy of the Civil War?

  8. “Author and You” Questions • Author and You questions ask you to combine your prior knowledge with information in the text to answer the question • These questions require you to think about what you have read and formulate your own ideas or opinions

  9. “Author and You” Questions • Example: • Based on the information about inventions of the late 1880s, which invention does the author imply had the greatest impact on American culture?

  10. Let’s try one together Example

  11. Now you try creating your own Level Questions

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