Lots of times when we ask questions in math class, they fall into 2 categories:

  1. Procedural/Right Answer questions, e.g. “What do you call the longest side of a right triangle?” or “What did you get for number three?” or “What is the mode of this data set?”
  2. “Higher-Order Questions” aka hard questions, e.g. “Why do you think someone might have come up with that [wrong] answer?” Or “Which of these is correct? Defend your choice.”

In my experience, even though we want all kids to be able to answer both types of questions, they’re both tricky. For the first type, kids either know what I’m looking for or they don’t, and so I either get a few loud kids participating or awkward silence, and often devolving into off-task behavior.

For the second type, look out! Talk about awkward silence and devolving into off-task behavior. Kids look at me like I’m crazy when I ask them to synthesize, justify, explain, etc. And they wait. They can’t out-wait me (I am the king of outlasting the awkward silence) but they sure do try.

So I’ve been trying to come up with questions that are good, math-y questions that don’t fit in either of those categories. I want questions that every kid can answer, by virtue of being a human (and therefore reasonably observant, semi-rational, interested in other humans, and decently resourceful). I want questions that kids see some need to answer, or are interested by. And I want questions that get kids doing some intellectual work that will help them do more work. And that doesn’t shut them down. Oh, and that helps me figure out what’s going on with them. And that aren’t questions I already know the answer to. Here are some:

  • What do you notice about ______?
  • What are you wondering?
  • What’s going on in this ______?
  • What’s making this hard?
  • On a scale of 1-10, how easy is this for you? How come?
  • What’s one thing you remember about ______?
  • Here are three different ______. Which do you like best? What’s one thing you liked about it?
  • Tell me one thing you thought about problem three.
  • What’s the first thing that pops into your mind when you see this?
  • What’s the fourth thing that pops into your mind when you see this?
  • What do you think a mathematician might notice about this?
  • If you saw this image/story/statement on a math quiz, what question(s) might go with it?
  • If your math fairy godmother appeared right now and offered to give you one helpful hint, what would you ask her for?
  • How confident are you in the work you’ve done so far?
  • The answer to the problem you’re about to work on is ______. How could someone have figured that out?
  • Have you ever had an experience like the one in the story?
  • What do you think the person in the story might be feeling?
  • Why do you think I showed you this?
  • What’s one thing you like about what she just said?
  • What’s one thing you’re wondering about what he just said?
  • What’s your best guess for the answer to this problem?
  • What is an answer that is definitely wrong for this problem?
  • Make a prediction. What do you think will happen…
  • Without writing anything down or calculating or thinking too hard, could ______ be the answer?
  • What’s your gut feeling?
  • Do you have a reason or a gut feeling (or both)?

In general, I’m trying to push myself to ask more questions in which I’m not trying to get the kids to say the thing I need them to say. Instead, I’m trying to find questions that get kids to put into words the things they need to say — to let me know what’s on their mind, what their current working model is, where they’re stuck and what they’re ready for. I can make predictions but I never know exactly where a kid will turn out to be, and so I try to maximize what I can learn about them, while using questions that let them know I value them and really want to hear their ideas (not them stating my ideas for me!).