Constructive Questions - Competendo - Digital Toolbox (2024)

Constructive questions are a tool for guiding a learner or a group toward self-explored solutions and options in a coaching style. We introduce four types of questions aimed at helping learners to envision options and opportinities for future action.

moderation tools

2-20 people

moderation, constructive questions, coaching

Contents

  • 1 Related:
  • 2 Goals
    • 2.1 General Rules for Questions
  • 3 Focusing on Problems
  • 4 Focusing on Solutions
  • 5 Open Questions
  • 6 Asking for Exceptions
  • 7 Reflecting Multiple Perspectives
  • 8 Coping
  • 9 Scaling
    • 9.1 Directing and Coaching
    • 9.2 Mentoring
    • 9.3 Nils-Eyk Zimmermann

Related:

  • Social Skills
  • Guidance through the Process
  • Directing and Coaching
  • Mentoring

Goals

Supporting learner-led decisionmaking. Addressing the self-competences and the self-responsibility of participants. Focus on solutions and options.

General Rules for Questions

1. Be precise. Try not to ask too much at once.

2. Only one question once (prevent asking double questions)

3. Support your question with an appropriate body language (hand twoards the group, raising eyebrows, ...)

4. Stop with a question mark. Don't explain your question afterwards.

5. Leave time for thinking. Don't speed up after asking a question.

Focusing on Problems

When facing a challenge, people use one of two approaches. In the academic sphere, problem-orientation is very common: We test a hypothesis critically. This criticism helps us to understand the hypothesis’s complexity and we elaborate on it. At conferences, other people review it with a critical attitude. In public relations we often define ourselves as “critically thinking people.”

This problem-oriented approach can be helpful in under­standing, but it often causes conflicts. And too much focus on the critical approach often makes situations more complex. When none of the possible solutions can meet the ideal requirements, a general solution may become too challenging for an unit, a training or project.

Focusing on Solutions

The broad field of coaching literature, concentrates on the opposite approach: helping people to find and develop solutions not based on their problems, but rather on their abilities. In most cases, your participants are able to find solutions from among their problems. That being said, we do not want to overlook the productivity of critical observing. We do want to point out that being oriented on solutions helps a discussion to move forward. Moderating facilitators can support this with an optimistic attitude and an appreciation for the learners' existing abilities and findings. In example:

  • “What do you want to achieve?”
  • "Which options are available?"
  • “Tell me about the last time this positive development happened. How did you respond?“
  • “What do you need to avoid in order to achieve your goal?”
  • “What will you need to do differently if the situation changes?”

Open Questions

A closed-ended question requires a specific answer. An open-ended question encourages multiple possibilities. It leads to new findings and perspectives. Constructive questions start with “who,” “what,” “when,” “where”

One example: If a participant in a discussion or a mentee is complaining and you ask her yes-or-no questions, what will happen? “Are you having trouble with your work?”“No, not really…”“Problems with your family?”“No, not really…”

In contrast, an open-ended question puts the person into an active position of responsibility. The conversation can then take - in apositive way - unexpected turns.

  • “What makes you feel this way?”

Asking for Exceptions

Exceptions are the situations in which something different was done successfully. By paying attention to them, we can under­stand what has to be done differently. Then the way to the solution and to different behavior is not impossible to imagine.

  • “What you do different now?”
  • “What can you do so other people see the difference?”
  • “How has the situation changed?”
  • “What has to happen for this to take place more often?”

Reflecting Multiple Perspectives

Changing perspectives can help one observe a situation in its totality. Circular questions make complex relationships visible. Without being able to ask the people involved directly, we can better visualize how everyone works together and what their differences would be in the same situation.

  • "How do the other parties look on this situation?"
  • “What does your partner think about the situation?”
  • “What does your boss think?”
  • “How do your project partners observe this?”
  • “What would people have thought ten years ago?”

Coping

We support our participants by showing empathy. Coping questions help construct a solution-oriented focus when a group or a person looses it. Let’s take this as an example: “Where does your optimism come from?” Initially the person asked feels a sense of connection and appreciation. Then, he or she hears the question more precisely and asks him or herself: “Hmm, where does my optimism come from and what how can I make it something reliable for myself in different situations?”

  • “How did you manage all this?”
  • “Where does your energy come from?”
  • "Where does your optimism come from?”
  • “Why aren’t things worse?”

Scaling

Scaling shows us where our goals fall along a scale. Where our initial positions are and what distance we have to cross to get there. When one uses scaling, one can talk concretely about what has to happen in the future in order to make progress along the scale. Or to reach the goal.

The combination of different scales can help us to analyze complex problems or to take stock of different aspects of a situation. Scales can be used with: teams, personal goals, outcomes, partnerships...

  • “Imagine a scale from 1 to 10. 1 is the lowest level 10 means, the problem is solved – where are you at the moment?”
  • “Where are you NOW on the scale?”
  • “How did you get there?”
  • “What will be the next step?”
  • “What has to happen to take the next step on the scale?”

Directing and Coaching

The use of questioning techniques is always embedded in a larger counseling strategy of the counselor or coach. You can find out more here:

  • Directing and Coaching

Mentoring

Mentoring is a special approach to support in which the competence to ask the right questions comes into play:

  • Mentoring

Nils-Eyk Zimmermann

Editor of Competendo. He writes and works on the topics: active citizenship, civil society, digital transformation, non-formal and lifelong learning, capacity building. Coordinator of European projects, in example DIGIT-AL Digital Transformation in Adult Learning for Active Citizenship, DARE network.

Blogs here: Blog: Civil Resilience.
Email: nils.zimmermann@dare-network.eu

Constructive Questions - Competendo - Digital Toolbox (2024)

FAQs

What are constructive questions? ›

Constructive questions are a tool for guiding a learner or a group toward self-explored solutions and options in a coaching style. We introduce four types of questions aimed at helping learners to envision options and opportinities for future action.

When constructing a questionnaire, it is important to do? ›

It is important for a questionnaire to be neutral and unbiased, so that the results truly reflect the opinions and experiences of the research participants. Therefore, it is not important to use "leading" or "loaded" questions when constructing a questionnaire.

What is an example of a constructed question? ›

The simplest forms of constructed response questions are fill-in-the-blank or short answer questions. For example, the question may take one of the following forms: Who was the 16th president of the United States? The 16th president of the United States was ___________________.

What is constructive example? ›

Examples of constructive in a Sentence

I tried to offer constructive criticism. Your feedback was not very constructive. The program helps people recently released from prison figure out how they can play a constructive role in society.

What are the 5 important things to consider in developing a questionnaire? ›

Table of Contents
  • #1: Identify your research aims and the goal of your questionnaire.
  • #2: Define your target respondents.
  • #3: Develop questions.
  • #4: Choose your question type.
  • #5: Design question sequence and overall layout.
  • #6: Run a pilot.
Jul 20, 2021

What is an example of a structured questionnaire? ›

A typical example of a structured questionnaire is the Census questionnaire, which collects demographic information from individuals. In addition, structured questionnaire is also often used as an assessment tool for psychological and psychiatric tests.

How to write a good questionnaire? ›

Writing good questions

You can achieve this by thinking about the following rules: Keep language simple and questions short. If you need to explain anything, avoiding leading the respondent to any particular answer. Avoid using jargon, acronyms, abbreviations and specialist terms.

What is an example of a constructive opinion? ›

An easy way to do this is to use the sentence structure, “When you [action],” or “Your performance on [project],” rather than using sentences that start with “You are.” A constructive feedback example about behavior is, “When you talk over Pam in the meetings, you're making all the women on our team feel less ...

What is an example of a constructive remark? ›

Example of constructive feedback: "Joe, you have impressive time management skills. You complete tasks quicker than most of the team and rarely turn in your work late. However, I would like to see you focus on the content of your work. For example, the form you sent me yesterday was missing key points.

What is an example of constructive response? ›

An example might be taking what you have learned about classroom management and using it to determine what your first day as a classroom teacher might look like. From that, you might explain how you would solve the problem of two students refusing to do their work and disrupting the class instead.

What is a constructive conversation? ›

What we call constructive conversation is back-and-forth talk that builds ideas and accomplishes a useful learning purpose. Students in many settings have been trained to think about short answers (e.g., choose a, b, or c; find the antonym; use a sentence frame to answer a question).

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