Book Creator

Grade 6 - Cradle of Humankind

by Anthony Egbers

Pages 2 and 3 of 85

Grade 6 - Cradle of Humankind
Workbook 2017
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Task Definition
What topic, problem or issue are you interested in?
What specific part of the topic are you interested in?
List a few possible questions about your specific topic area.
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Task Definition
List a few possible questions about your specific topic area.
Choose one to be your main research question.
Make your question as clear and specific as possible.
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STEP 1

Start with factual or memory questions, you can usually Google the answers.

What is...?
What is...basically saying here?
What is meant by...?
Who...?
When...?
How much...?
How many...?

These questions provide the backround for the subject - the facts. The are lower order thinking questions.
How to ANALYSE (breakdown) your big question.
STEP 2

Then move on to convergent thinking questions.

In what ways...?
What are the reasons for...?
What are the functions of...?
What other examples of...?
What are the causes or results of...?
What are the possible solutions for...?
What evidence/proof is offered...?
How does...apply to...?
What are the similarities/differences between...and...?

These are slightly more advanced questions. You would still find some of the information on Google but you would have to look at more than 1 or 2 sources and compare what they say.
STEP 3

Now start trying to get your own ideas down on paper. These questions ask you to predict, reconstruct, infer or look at a new perspective on your subject.

Imagine...if...ocurrs, then what...?
Suppose...?
Predict...?
How might...change?
Can you create...?
What are the possible consequences...?

These questions help you start to generate your own ideas by adding in things you want to know or understand.
How to ANALYSE (breakdown) your big question.
STEP 4 - not for this project

Now it gets a bit more difficult but a whole lot more interesting! You get to start making judgements, looking at your values and defending your choices.

Can you defend...?
...is...good or bad/correct or incorrect/effective or ineffective/logical and illogical?
What are the advantages/disadvantages of...?
What do you think about...?
What is your opinion about...?
What evidence supports your opinion?

You can do this in 2 ways:
1) Use the list of questions you have created in the previous steps.
2) You can brainstorm and list any questions that come to mind. Use a bullet list or a mind map.
Step 2 - Information Seeking
Your
research
answers
Ellipse;
Your
research
questions
Ellipse;
Ellipse;
Ellipse;
Your
'Big'
Question
Ellipse;
Ellipse;
Ellipse;
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