I Notice, I Wonder

I Notice, I Wonder

Activity Overview

Students observe a text, image, object, or data and generate 'I notice...' statements and 'I wonder...' questions to build curiosity and observation skills.

Grade Levels

Kindergarten1st Grade2nd Grade3rd Grade4th Grade5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceMathematicsEnglishHistoryForeign Language

Activity Types

IndividualAnalyticalVisual

Detailed Example

Introducing a Math Problem (Mathematics - 5th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • Problem or image displayed without the question
  • Two-column recording sheet
  • Chart paper for class collection

Preparation

Select a rich problem or image. Display initially without showing the question. Prepare two-column anchor chart: I Notice | I Wonder. Have individual recording sheets ready.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Display the math scenario without showing the question: A table shows prices of different size pizzas at three restaurants.

2.

'Before we see the question, let's observe. What do you notice?'

3.

Silent think time (1 minute): Study the information.

4.

Individual writing (3 minutes): Write 'I notice...' statements. Be specific. 'I notice Restaurant A has the cheapest small pizza at $6.'

5.

Share noticings: Collect on chart paper. Accept all observations without judgment.

6.

'Now what do you wonder? What questions pop into your mind?'

7.

Individual writing (3 minutes): Write 'I wonder...' questions. 'I wonder which restaurant has the best deal for a large pizza.'

8.

Share wonderings: Collect on chart paper.

9.

Reveal the actual problem question. 'Did anyone wonder something similar?'

10.

Solve the problem, building on observations and questions generated.

Differentiation Strategies

Provide sentence frames: 'I notice that...', 'I wonder if/why/how...'. Accept drawings as noticings for younger students. Challenge advanced students to categorize their noticings (numbers, relationships, patterns).

Assessment Guidelines

Evaluate specificity and relevance of noticings. Check if wonderings lead toward mathematical thinking. Note which students make sophisticated observations.

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