Table of Contents
What are the 7 key questions?
Ask the right question: Who, What, Why, When, Where, How, How Much? – Consultant’s Mind. These 7 key questions are a great checklist, but also a sanity check. Ask the right question: Who, What, Why, When, Where, How, How Much? – Consultant’s Mind. These 7 key questions are a great checklist, but also a sanity check. The seven essential questions are: (1) The Kickstart Question; (2) The AWE Question; (3) The Focus Question; (4) The Foundation Question; (5) The Lazy Question; (6) The Strategic Question; and (7) The Learning Question. I have adapted them for the purposes of conflict coaching. Magic questions are the questions that help people decide that this is really what they’re looking for and help them reassure themselves it’s not going to be a mistake.
What are the big 3 questions?
The Three Big Questions strategy challenges readers to annotate in the margins by marking passages that answer the questions: What surprised me?, What did the author think I already knew?, and What challenged, changed, or confirmed what I already knew?. The Three Big Questions strategy challenges readers to annotate in the margins by marking passages that answer the questions: What surprised me?, What did the author think I already knew?, and What challenged, changed, or confirmed what I already knew?. The Levels of Questions strategy helps students comprehend and interpret a text by requiring them to answer three types of questions about it: factual, inferential, and universal. The seven essential questions are: (1) The Kickstart Question; (2) The AWE Question; (3) The Focus Question; (4) The Foundation Question; (5) The Lazy Question; (6) The Strategic Question; and (7) The Learning Question. I have adapted them for the purposes of conflict coaching. Thick questions deal with the big picture and large concepts. Answers to thick questions are involved, complex and open ended. Thin questions deal with specific content or words. Answers to thin questions are short and close ended. Thick questions deal with the big picture and large concepts. Answers to thick questions are involved, complex and open ended. Thin questions deal with specific content or words. Answers to thin questions are short and close ended.