Ma’am, what in the world is Akash doing? What is the purpose of this activity? What is inside that skull of yours anyway? What would happen if that lizard came to sit on your table?
The ‘what’ questions are perhaps
the easiest to find answers to, requiring a basic knowledge, not even
much of understanding. Lower Order Thinking Skills, you know, if you
are technically inclined. You don’t really have to engage your mental
gears at all to be able to respond. These are usually the inane
questions, the answers to which the questioner already knows or can find
out with minimum effort. They are generally used by children to express
amazement, disgust, frustration, and least often, genuine curiosity.
But ‘How do you know
what the purpose of this activity is’ is another level of questioning
that needs some comprehension and turning of the wheels in the brain.
‘How do you know what is the purpose of your life’ is far more complex a
query than the mere ‘what is the purpose of your life’. What is inside
that skull of yours is a rhetorical question, the answer to which may
vary from ‘a brain’, ‘loads of ideas’, ‘a monster in dormant mode’, ‘an
inflated sense of self’, to ‘me’, ‘a psychopath’, ‘thoughts’, or ‘the
universe’ depending on how the answerer thinks and whether he is in a
contemplative mood, smart ass mood, wicked mood, depressed mood or
simply bored, whereas “‘How’ do you know what is inside that
skull of yours anyway?” would require deep contemplation, balancing of
positive and negative forces, comprehension of the self, and images and
feelings that you’d have to grapple with in order to admit they’re
inside your skull. See the increasing complexity of the question stem?
This is just from What to How. Even so, technically you are still in the
LOTS (Lower Order Thinking Skills).
You see, the Howes are definitely much more of thinking people than
the Watts in class. (Standing joke from some smart kids even though I
never had Howes and Watts in my class, but rather had Mishras, Sharmas
and Nairs among others.)
Of course, questions that begin with When and Where are no-brainers. I
don’t think there is much skill – lower or higher – involved in
answering those.
The question that is most
dreadful to answer in class is the Why question. It requires investing
the brain in the process of thinking, analysing, evaluating, and
synthesising information and thought before an answer can be arrived at.
These are the Higher Order Thinking Skills or HOTS, for short. (You’re
expected to not only have the HOTS in class, but also to help develop
them in the kids! Sacrilege and OMG!) And then, you have to be able to
use language to express exactly what you mean to say without stumbling,
stuttering or rambling. Oh yes, you have to be good if you are to respond to a Why question.
And the most confounding answer to a Why question is, of course, ‘Why
not?’ The sages of yore knew that they would be stumped if someone came
up with a difficult why question, so they, in their sagacity and
wisdom, invented its sure-shot counter – ‘Why not?’
Why is Akash doing what he is doing? Why not? Why are we doing this activity? Why not? Why is there a brain inside the skull? Why not? Why would that lizard ever think of coming down to sit on your table? Why not?
Notice that you cannot use this
strategy with the other question stems like what, how, when and where
without sounding crazy (What not? How not? When not? Where not?).
However, a ‘why not’ sounds a lot more intelligent and profound and is
therefore a safe option to use if you wish to sound intellectual,
superior, artsy or smart. It’s like one of those modern paintings – the
artist makes an intriguing pattern of colours or shapes and the rest of
the world endows it with profound or fantastical meaning which is
unique to each person…and which the artist probably never intended. But
then, that is good art; each viewer experiences it at the personal level
irrespective of what the artist meant – ‘Oh! I had these weird muscular
spams while doing that piece; though the results look deeply
stimulating, don’t you think?’
Here is one from a babe’s mouth that had me resort to the age old wisdom of those ancient sages:
Why do we go to school?
Innumerable reasons pulled out
from their parking spots in the recesses of my brain and rushed to my
tongue, but it was difficult to articulate any for the four year old
child. ‘It builds…’, ‘you learn…’, ‘it helps…’ – three false starts
later, inspiration hit me, ‘Why not?!’
P. S: ‘Whys’ might be the most important questions the kids would ever ask you.
Your ‘why not’ will invariably lead them to answer the why themselves with a little help!
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