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EACHER
inevitably emerges. Instead students are requested to focus on spe-
cific events and actions that are engaging, distancing,
confusing, or
helpful. Having this highly concrete information about particular
events and actions is much more useful than reading general state-
ments of preferences.
The form that students receive has a top sheet and a bottom sheet
divided by a piece of carbon paper. This allows the student to keep a
carbon copy of whatever she has written. The reason I ask them to
keep a copy is because at the end of the semester they are expected,
as part
of their assigned course work, to hand in a summary of their
responses. This summary is part of the end-of-course participant learn-
ing portfolio that documents what and how students have learned
during the semester. The portfolio item dealing with the CIQ asks for
a content analysis of major themes that emerged in students’
responses over the semester. It also asks for a discussion of the direc-
tions for future learning that these responses suggested. Consequently,
students know it’s in their own best interests
to complete these ques-
tionnaires as fully as possible each week because they will gain credit
for an analysis of them later in the term.
The CIQ takes about five minutes to complete, and students are
told
not to put their name on the form. If nothing comes to mind
as a response to a particular question, they are told to leave the
space blank. They are also told that at
the next class I will share
the group’s responses with them.
The questions are:
At what moment in class this week did you feel most engaged
with what was happening?
At what moment in class this week were you most distanced
from what was happening?
What action that anyone (teacher or student) took this week did
you find most affirming or helpful?
07_980668 ch03.qxp 7/27/06 3:25 PM Page 42
What action that anyone took this week did you find most puz-
zling or confusing?
What about the class this week surprised you the most? (This
could be about your own reactions to what went on, something
that someone did, or anything else that occurs.)
As
they leave the room, I ask students to leave the top sheet of
the critical incident form on a chair or table by the door, face down-
wards, and to take the bottom carbon copy with them. After I have
collected the CIQ responses at the end of the last class each week,
I read through them looking for common themes. For a class size of
thirty
to thirty-five students, this usually takes about twenty min-
utes. I look for comments that indicate problems or confusions,
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