Professional Development Reflection - Concept Based Inquiry
Professional
Development Reflection
By: Michelle Hobbs
Currently I am
engaged in an 8 week long Professional Development course called “Concept-Based
Inquiry in Action.” The course was developed by Rachel French and I am
currently taking the course with Michelle Simpson, who trained under Rachel
French. This course is being taken alongside many people at my current school,
TIS Macao. Friday March 7, 2025 was the first ZOOM call and calls will continue
for the next 8 upcoming weeks.
So far, I have
read the introduction and first two chapters of the course book, “Concept-Based
Inquiry in Action: Strategies to Promote Transferable Understanding” by Carla
Marschall and Rachel French. I have also completed the first three course
modules, along with all associated work, have made a post on the course forum,
and have gone to the first ZOOM session.
During our ZOOM
call our main task was to work in groups to create a definition of student
agency. While I am familiar with constructivist theory / constructivism, I
had never done this type of activity before. At first, we had 5 minutes to
create a definition of the term on our own. After that we were placed with a
partner in a break out room. We both had to share our definition and we had to
collaborate to create a new definition. After that we were put into groups of 4
and then 8. Each time the same thing occurred and we were asked to create a new
shared definition. It was meaningful to see the definition evolve over time
with input from more and more colleagues. In the end my group of 8 came up with
this definition, which had been built individually, and then in 3 groups,
Student agency is when students feel
empowered to take authentic ownership of their learning by making meaningful
choices about how they express their knowledge and gather information. It
emphasizes the importance of their voice in shaping their educational
experiences, ensuring they feel respected and valued. In this process, teachers
facilitate authentic opportunities by providing necessary tools and strategies
to support independent thinking and collaboration.
Given my current
position, teaching grade 4 (upper elementary) for the first time, I think that
this strategy would be useful. It can also be utilized both at the beginning of
learning as a formative assessment and closer to the end of learning about a
concept to see what students have learned, and how their definitions have
evolved over time. It would be useful too, if done twice in a unit, for
students to evaluate their learning in an “I used to think / now I think”
sense. With the upcoming unit which focuses on resources and waste management,
these are broad concepts I may want to consider having students define, through
this strategy. If students can see very clearly how their learning grew over
the course of the unit, this also helps them to think reflectively.
As I teach at a
tier 4 province of Alberta overseas school, which is also PYP accredited, there
has been a big challenge at my school of taking such a standards heavy
curriculum and applying it alongside the PYP. I feel like this concept-based
approach will help us out a lot as we can look at the standards, the central
idea that currently exists, pull out concepts and try to bring everything
together. From there, we can use concepts to form Generalized conceptual
understandings and questions. We can then consider which facts and learning
engagements support the driving of students towards forming that particular
conceptual understanding. Under this approach (inductive) students will be
provided with many examples, examine patterns, and then the students themselves
will form the generalization. It’s a new way of doing things for me, as in the
past, when I was teaching PYP the central idea would be posted on the wall from
the start or near the start of the unit. Students would already know the Big
Idea from the start / near the start and then we’d build into that
understanding, versus students constructing their own understanding. I think
that this new way of doing things will allow students to think more critically
and go deeper with their learning. Since students are finding the patterns
themselves and figuring out the conceptual understanding / big idea based on
those patterns, hopefully the learning will stick with them more.
One activity I
developed recently, though I have not done it in the classroom yet, involves
children developing their own understanding of the fantasy genre. In the
activity students would get the excerpts and a list of 20 popular fantasy
books, but the excerpts would not state which books they originated in.
Students would also get a list of the 20 books that the excerpts are from. The
first step for students would be to read through the excerpts and to see which
passages they could figure out without any research, simply based on what they
know and from inferencing. The next step would be students researching, first
using the novels and later using the Chromebook if necessary. Not only would
they need to identify which book they think the excerpt comes from, but also
justify why they think that is true. In terms of the Concept Based Inquiry
course, this fits right into the idea of being “Evidence minded.” Once they
were done looking at all the excerpts, I wanted them to look for common themes
such as magic, witches / wizards, dragons, talking animals, fantasy worlds,
etc.
This activity was
developed before I began taking the course, but based on my emerging
understanding of the content, it’s easy to see how it could fit into students
developing a conceptual understanding about fantasy. My next intentions were
then to take excerpts from various fantasy books, alter the reading level using
AI, and then to have students study these passages through guided reading and
comprehension tasks. My current thinking is that at the end of this short
fantasy unit, students could create their own generalized conceptual
understanding of the topic. I was thinking something like, “Fantasy books take
readers on thrilling adventures in imaginary worlds where anything is
possible,” may be one possibility.
In terms of
planning using Concept Based Inquiry, that began in our planning meeting for
our current unit “How the World Works” in which we delve into many space-related
concepts such as “Non-contact forces,” “Earth systems,” “Space Navigation” and
“Space technology.” With so many concepts that we needed to focus on for that
unit, we really dug deep in considering some key concepts, guiding questions
and conceptual understandings. More recently we were planning for our “Sharing
the Planet” unit about resources and waste management. This time around we took
a similar pathway in our planning, looking at our concept of matter and
considering Waste Management and resources from a science-based concepts
perspective and a more social-studies based perspective. Many of our concepts,
for example “hazardous materials” also came directly from our Alberta
standards.
Within the course
I had the opportunity to develop a generalization on my own using the specific
strategies suggested by Rachel French. During the first step I brainstormed a
variety of different concepts related to global pandemics such as: disease,
fear, protection and preparation. In my first step I wrote, “Global pandemics
affect human response to disease.” The second step involved changing the statement
into a how or why question and then answering that question with the conceptual
understanding so I wrote, “How do global pandemics affect human response to
disease” and I answered with, “Humans respond to global pandemics through
protection and fear.” Step 3 is not always applicable; however it was practiced
here to go deeper, and that is, asking, “So what?” So, I did that and
eventually through re-working I came up with, “Responding to global pandemics
involves both protection and fear as human responses.” While I am not teaching
anything related to Global pandemics this year, I saw this as a great
opportunity to practice writing a generalization on my own, and after I wrote
it I posted the entire thinking process, and steps into the forum for peer
feedback.
The first time I
saw Rachel French was at the Toddle Japan PYP Meet session "Exploring the
Power of Concept-Based Inquiry in the PYP" online, in 2023. A recording of
that session can be found in the resources list at the end of this paper. At the
time I was interested in what Rachel French had to say and started to unpack
the concepts and conceptual understandings of the unit I was teaching at the
time, which was a Grade 2 “Who we are” unit about Balanced Lifestyle. I
discovered that over my 3 years of having taught and developed this unit, there
were many concepts and generalizations I could find about health and balanced
lifestyle that I taught throughout the unit. At that time, however, with only a
1 hour talk to refer back to, there was only so far, I could go. I ordered
Rachel French, Lois A Lanning and H. Lynn Erickson’s book “Concept Based
Curriculum and Instruction for the Thinking Classroom” with the best of
intentions, however, unfortunately was only able to find time to read a very
small part of it. Suffice to say, Rachel French and this course about Concept
Based Inquiry has been at the forefront of my mind for a long time, so when I
found the chance to take the course with my school, I jumped on it. It’s great
to be within my school learning community, as I delve into these concepts.
Those who would benefit from this course are any teachers or administrators looking to enhance their curriculum design and instructional strategies, particularly as it applies to inquiry-based learning. Additionally, those who work in curriculum, such as PYP coordinators or anyone in curriculum development leadership positions looking to develop educational programs that value critical thinking, inquiry and conceptual understanding would benefit from this professional development. Lastly, educational researchers who want to know more about effective modern teaching methodologies or about the evolving history of inquiry-based teaching, may find value in this course.
Resources
French, Rachel. Concept-Based Inquiry. Professional Learning International. https://cbi.prolearnint.com/
French, R, Lanning, L. A., & Erickson, H. L. (2017). Concept-based curriculum and instruction for the thinking classroom. Corwin.
French, Rachel & Marschall, Carla. (2018). Concept-based
inquiry in action: Strategies to promote transferable understanding.
Corwin.
Toddle. (n.d.). Inquiry through concept-based learning:
Japan PYP meet. Toddle.
French, Rachel. Exploring the Power of Concept-Based Inquiry in the PYP https://www.toddleapp.com/learn/talk-post/concept-based-inquiry-pyp/
Hi Michelle,
ReplyDeleteWonderful reflection on your professional development opportunity! It sounds like a great course to take to develop student agency. I think this approach would work well in middle school, as many students do not want to do an activity unless there is something that relates to their interests. I particularly like the idea of students matching the excerpts of a fiction novel to the novel itself. That requires a great evidence based reasoning skills and is a great way to start developing that skill. My question for you is, when you are making these groups for that activity, are you making them at random? Or are you pairing students up based on their reading abilities? I know for my class, there are students who probably would have read most of those books, but others who would not have read any. For the students that do not read as much, I can see how this exercise might be overwhelming. Using student agency at the start and the end of a unit would be a great way to engage students and also have them reflect on learning that has taken place. This practice seems like a great innovative approach to student engagement and learning.
Hello Charlotte, I'm pretty intentional with pairing up low readers and high readers. In addition the passages were selected very carefully to contain key moments from the story, hints in character names, hints with the events or the passage might be explaining a key piece of information within a story (such as what a Borrower is in The Borrowers). I did make sure though that major hints were taken out of the story like the name Pooh in Winnie the Pooh or James and peach in James and the Giant Peach or Harry in Harry Potter.
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