Divergent question

A divergent question is a question with no specific answer, but rather exercises one's ability to think broadly about a certain topic.

In education

Popular in inquiry education, divergent questions allow students to explore different avenues and create many different variations and alternative answers or scenarios. Correctness may be based on logical projections, may be contextual, or arrived at through basic knowledge, conjecture, inference, projection, creation, intuition, or imagination. These types of questions often require students to analyze, synthesize, or evaluate a knowledge base and then project or predict different outcomes.

A simple example of a divergent question is:

Write down as many different uses as you can think of for the following objects: (1) a brick, (2) a blanket.

gollark: It might be a bad ÜSB stick.
gollark: Two minutes does sound high.
gollark: That should be better than the micro-SD card, really.
gollark: Finding the longest path is easy. Find the shortest one and don't do it.
gollark: Even if they did run in their own thread, imagine how horrendously inefficiently some players would program without it.

References

  • Gladwell, M (2008) Outliers. Hachette Book Group, New York City, NY.
  • Erickson, H. L. (2007) Concept-based curriculum and instruction for the thinking classroom. Thousand Oaks, Corwin Press.
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