Ok, this one came in from a teacher. They had been given a ring of pre-written questions that incorporated Depth and Complexity. They suspected something was wrong. They were right.
Here’s one example:
How would __ be best described by people working in this area/field/discipline?
I honestly don’t know what I’d even do with this. I probably just wouldn’t use it at all. 🤷♂️
Actually, that’s the best lesson to take away. Have high standards. It’s okay to decide a question, worksheet, or task just isn’t good enough for your students. Send it back like a piece of undercooked chicken!
What’s Wrong?
Let’s see how many problems I can spot:
- There’s a huge “Vagueness Disease” issue here. Not only do we not know the topic. We don’t even know THE WORD we’re asking about.
- Vagueness continued: We can’t even decide if we’re asking about an area, a field, or a discipline 😝.
- Obviously the creator of this didn’t taste their own soup. They didn’t try answering their own question before selling it to teachers. This is a very rough draft.
- It’s a one-off question. Flip the card over and there’s a totally unrelated question! We want to ask sequences, not unrelated one-off questions.
- This implies that you can just plug questions into any lesson. No no no. Questions must be carefully written and planned with purpose. One-size-fits-all doesn’t fit anything.
- This question starts with, “I need to ask a Language of the Disciplines question.” Never start with a Depth and Complexity prompt and try to make it fit. That’s like saying, “I have a plum. I have to plan my dinner around this plum.” No! You’d use the plum where it fits naturally. You’re not going to plan the meal around it.