We are doing an inquiry project in our seminar class at Vic High, and while working on the project I thought of many ties to the Multiliteracies class that were interesting. My topic for this project is: “What defines inquiry-based learning in Grade 9 math?” Inquiry-based learning is a broadly multiliterate style of learning, possible of incorporating the following Multiliteracies practices: experiencing the known, experiencing the new, analyzing critically, and analyzing functionally.
Through my observations at Vic High, I noticed a style of inquiry that was very simple yet effective: question-based lecturing. Essentially, instead of lecturing through stating facts to the students, a teacher can lecture by asking the students what comes next, as well as asking the students “why” along the way. This is a form of both analyzing functionally and analyzing critically.
Another way in which I have seen inquiry in the classroom is through a project in which students go to a financial institution to inquiry about debit cards, fees, account types, and more. They then similarly look up a credit card and find out more about charges, interest rates, limits, and more. This ties in the Multiliteracies practices of experiencing the new, analyzing functionally, and analyzing critically into the Grade 9 math classroom.
Finally, a project that struck me as multiliterate in the senses of experiencing the known and experiencing the new was one in which students came up with one area of life in which they use knowledge of a particular math concept.
All of these different inquiry-based methods of teaching math proved to me to be effective approaches of also incorporating Multiliteracies into my future teaching. Attached is an image of my poster that I will be presenting on this topic at both a Gallery Walk at Vic High and a Gallery Walk at UVic.