I've been reading Teaching the New Writing, a great new book from the National Writing Project. One section describes Greely High School in Maine, which takes an inquiry approach to science. All ninth-graders take a course called Foundations of Science, and everyone enters the school science fair as a common assessment.
What caught my eye was a deliberate shift at the start of these projects. Previously, students would work 1:1 with a teacher to refine their question. But as the authors point out, "this method of developing ideas does not foster the collaborative nature of science practice, and it does not recognize the potential for novel input from student peers." So now there's a peer review process--right at the start of the research phase--to hone the investigation.
I'm wondering, are two (or more) heads always better than one when it comes to inquiry? In a group setting, how do you coax out those novel/quirky/off-the-wall ideas that might push everyone's thinking?
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