SALDA Blanks Level of Questioning
SALDA Blanks Level of Questioning
SALDA Blanks Level of Questioning
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Blank’s Levels of Questions - Level 3: Reordering Perception
• Questions are not about direct objects.
• The answers require listeners to use their own knowledge and higher order thinking. It
requires listener to make basic predictions, assume the role of another or make generalisations.
• Understanding of these questions develop around 4 ½ years of age.
Level 3 question examples:
• What will happen next?
• What is a ________? (Definition)
• Find one to use with this.
• Find the things that are not _______.
• What could he say? (Assuming the role of another person)
• How are these the same? (Identifying similarities)
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Strategies for Practicing Higher Levels of Blank’s Levels of Questioning
• Ensure questions are of a suitable difficulty for the listener. Trial questions starting from
Blank’s level 1 and if the student is successful, progress to level two etc. When students have
difficulty responding to Blank’s questions at a certain level, this may level may be a suitable
target for them.
• Utilise visual supports to aid understanding such as pictures or diagrams.
• Allow sufficient time (10 seconds +) for student to think through and provide an answer.
• Repeat the question for the listener if required.
• Simplify the question by breaking it down into parts or presenting lower level questions to
prompt higher level answers. For example, “How are a cow and a dog the same?” “What
group does a cow belong to?” (animal) “What group does a dog belong to?” (animal) “So
how are they the same?” (they are animals).
• Focus on important features in the question (e.g. if asked how two items are the same, you
can draw their attention to similarities).
• Provide first sound or syllable of the answer.
• Provide sentence completion cue (e.g. What animal is this? It is a _____).
• Explicitly break down how to answer higher level questions.
• Relate known to unknown by relating answers back to student’s previous experiences (e.g.
The tea is hot. How will it feel after some time? Remember what happens when we leave hot
water out for some time? How did it feel?).
• Provide a model of how to answer higher level questions by verbalising your own thought
process when answering questions.
• Reinforce that questions can have many correct answers.
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References
Blank, M. (2002). Classroom discourse: A key to literacy. In K. Butler & E. Silliman (Eds.), Speaking,
reading and writing in children with learning disabilities: New paradigms in research and practice (pp.
151-173). Malwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Blank, M., Rose, S. A. & Berlin, L. J. (1978) The Language of Learning: The Preschool Years. Orlando:
Grune & Stratton, Inc.
Blank, M. & Sheila, J. (1986). Questions: A Powerful but Misused Form of Classroom Exchange. Topics
in Language Disorders, 6(2), 1-12.
Version 1.01
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