Olivas Cupping The Spark in Our Hands 1
Olivas Cupping The Spark in Our Hands 1
Olivas Cupping The Spark in Our Hands 1
Bernice Olivas
Boise State University
In The Companion Website for the Curious Writer, Michelle Payne describes the process of
inquiry as “begin[ning] with the premise that students and teachers are collaborators in learning,
creating knowledge together through the questions they ask and the methods that best help them
answer them.” Inquiry theorists, including John Dewey, Jerome S. Bruner, and Bruce Ballenger,
contend that the act of questioning is central to academic inquiry. We begin with questions; we
focus on the process of inquiry, of searching, of trying something in a way that is new to us. Yet
first-year writing students are rarely taught how to craft well-developed questions as part of
inquiry-based research writing.
It is my contention that because the research question holds a unique position in inquiry-based
research writing it deserves special consideration in the first-year writing classroom. According to
inquiry-based education, the research question acts both as the driving force of the inquiry process
and as a focal point in the finished product. In “Skating Backwards on Thin Ice,” Ballenger says,
“At the heart of inquiry—and essay writing for that matter—is finding the questions that make even
the most mundane topics come to life” (103).
Students can benefit from learning to craft a well-developed research question because it will
allow them to better engage in the inquiry process, to create more focused products, and to better
understand research writing as artistic and imaginative. Because the research question is so impor-
tant to the outcome of an inquiry-based research project, it should be taught not as a pre-writing
strategy for the researched essay but as an important text in and of itself. Students benefit from
crafting their questions through a process of pre-writing, drafting, and revision. In this article, I will
discuss my research of the inquiry-based research question, which includes an analysis of anony-
mous student samples, a unit I designed and taught to a summer class of English 101 students, and
an analysis of the papers those students produced.
APPENDIX I
Questions the Students Asked
APPENDIX II
The Prompts
Focusing your topic
Please fill in the blanks.
Your research question or topic: ———
Rewrite it by filling in the blanks:
I want to study ——— because I want to better understand ——— .
Can you state your topic in the form of a question? For example, can you fill in one or more of
these blanks?
What is the relationship between ——— and ———?
How does ——— affect ———?
Why does ——— affect ———?
Why does ——— cause ———?
What causes ———?
What causes ——— in ———?
Does your question generate more questions? Please write 3–5 questions your topic brings to mind.
What does your topic question suggest to you about organizing your paper?
Check anything on this list you think apply to your topic question.
___My question will generate a lot of information.
___My question will help me decide what information to use and what not to use.
___My question will lead me to new ideas but may not be able to be answered.
___My goal is to write a paper that will answer my question.
___My goal is to write a paper that will better help me and my readers understand my question
topic and its significance.
Rewrite your question in your own words, but make sure it is in the form of a question.
Writing prompt #1:
Poetry is an act of distilment. The short space of a poem often forces us to decide what is most
important to us about our subject. Your subject is your topic question. Write me a poem. It can be
Olivas 17
any type of poem, or just free verse. What is important is to get the most important aspects of your
subject on paper. Underline what you think are the most important lines in your poem. Then rewrite
your topic question . . . Has it changed?
Writing prompt #2:
Part of being a writer is finding new angles to view the world from. We draw inspiration
from personal experience and from the things that are important to us. All writers suffer from an
enlarged ego, no matter what form, style, or format we are writing in, we find ways to make it about
us. We find ways to make it important, relevant and significant to our lives, our opinions, our
beliefs. Be as egotistical as you can be. Make it all about you. Tell me why you want to write about
your topic then rewrite your topic question . . . Has it changed?
Works Cited
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School and College. Ed. Thomas Thompson. Urbana: NCTE, 2002. 115–35. Print.
Ballenger, Bruce. “The Bothersome Beauty of Pigeons.” The Curious Researcher. 6th ed. New York: Pearson, 2009.
12–25. Print.
———. “Skating Backwards on Thin Ice.” Beyond Note Cards: Rethinking the Freshman Research Paper.
Portsmouth: Boynton/Cook, 1999. 96–130. Print.
Bartholomae, David. “Inventing the University.” Cross Talk in Comp Theory: A Reader. 2nd ed.
Ed. Victor Villanueva. Urbana: NCTE, 2003. 623–53. Print.
Bishop, Wendy, “When All Writing Is Creative and Student Writing Is Literature.” The Subject Is Writing: Essays by
Teachers and Students. 2nd ed. Ed. Wendy Bishop. Portsmouth: Boynton/Cook, 1999. 192–202. Print.
Boyer Commission on Educating Undergraduates in the Research University. Reinventing Undergraduate
Education: A Blueprint for America’s Research Universities. State University of New York, 1998. Web. 9 May
2009.
Bruner, Jerome S. Toward a Theory of Instruction. New York: Norton, 1966. Print.
Carroll, Lee Ann. Rehearsing New Roles: How College Students Develop as Writers. Carbondale: Southern Illinois
UP, 2002. Print.
Dewey, John. How We Think. Boston: D. C. Heath, 1910. Print.
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30.2 (1979): 182–86. Print.
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