What an Inquiry Lesson is NOT

Some Initial Thoughts


(Under development - last updated 1/31/2007)

~ Carl J. Wenning ~

In this course you are asked to prepare and present two 50-minute, stand-alone inquiry lessons. For the purposes of this course, an inquiry lesson is defined by the instructor (in his paper Levels of inquiry: Hierarchies of pedagogical practices and inquiry processes. Journal of Physics Teacher Education Online, 2(3), February 2005) as follows:

“In the inquiry lesson, the emphasis subtly shifts to a more complex form of scientific experimentation. The pedagogy is one in which the activity is based upon the teacher remaining in charge by providing guiding, indeed leading, questions. Guidance is given more indirectly using appropriate questioning strategies. The teacher places increasing emphasis on helping students to formulating their own experimental approaches, identifying and controlling variables, and defining the system. The teacher now speaks about scientific process explicitly by providing an ongoing commentary about the nature of inquiry. The teacher models fundamental intellectual processes and explains the fundamental understandings of scientific inquiry while the students learn by observing and listening, and responding to questions. This is in effect scientific inquiry using a vicarious approach with the teacher using a “think aloud” protocol. This approach will more fully help students understand the nature of inquiry processes. This form of inquiry lesson is essential to bridging the gap between interactive demonstration and laboratory experiences. This is so because it is unreasonable to assume that students can use more sophisticated experimental approaches before they are familiar with them. For instance, students must be able to distinguish between independent, dependent, controlled, and extraneous variables before they can develop a meaningful controlled scientific experiment.” (p. 5-6)

While this definition is apt, it is not presented in a vacuum. In the article from which the inquiry lesson is abstracted, it is contrasted with discovery learning and interactive demonstrations on one end of a continuous spectrum of inquiry types, and labs and hypothetical inquiry on the other end of the spectrum. When such a definition has “bookends,” it is relatively easy to distinguish an inquiry-oriented lesson from other things in the continuum. However, when the definition of the inquiry lesson stands alone, it is less clear of what an inquiry lesson consists. In such a case a number of non-examples can be more helpful in understanding the nature of an inquiry lesson than a good definition. Consider what an inquiry lesson is not. A stand-alone inquiry-oriented lesson is NOT a(n):

Inquiry can take many forms such as research, problem-based learning, panel discussions, etc. However, these forms of not generally appropriate to the for of self-contained, 50-minute inquiry lesson required in this course.