Types of Knowledge
Role of Language and Imagination in the P.A.D
Knowledge and Culture Told through Stories
Space with you/The Practice of practice learning
Beyond the Classroom
100

What is the study of knowledge and how we acquire it called?

What is epistemology?

100

Who wrote the essay Why Are Americans Afraid of Dragons?

Who is Ursula K. Le Guin?

100

Tell us a story from your background.

Free point

100

This term describes a classroom or learning environment where every individual feels valued and respected.

What is an inclusive space?

100

Tell us an extracurricular that you have participated in and the skill you gained from it.

Free point

200

What are the three components of the tripartite theory of knowledge?

What are belief, truth, and justification?

200

According to Murray Hunter, what type of imagination helps us feel what others feel?

What is empathy?

200

What story did Toni Morrison share in her acceptance speech?

What is the dead bird, the blind old lady and the young people.

200

This educational approach emphasizes the importance of incorporating students’ cultural backgrounds into learning to create supportive spaces.

What is culturally responsive teaching?

200

In engaging in Extracurricular, what skills do colleges look for extracurricular?

What is Commitment, Depth and Leadership.

300

What are the two main sources of knowledge debated in epistemology?

What are empiricism and rationalism?

300

What type of imagination allows for the creation of fictional stories, myths, and folklore?

What is imaginative fantasy?

300

Who is the author of Oral Storytelling in the primary English classroom?

Who is Janice Bland.

300

This concept refers to environments that promote open dialogue, emotional safety, and shared vulnerability among participants.

What is a safe space?

300

What are the four elements to a student’s voice?

What is space, audience, influence and voice.

400

What type of knowledge refers to knowing how to do something, like riding a bike?

What is procedural knowledge?

400

In Why Are Americans Afraid of Dragons?, what societal value does Le Guin say causes Americans to distrust fantasy?

What is the Puritan work ethic?

400

According to Bland, what is one technique used in oral storytelling?

What is repetition.

400

Integrating students’ lived experiences into the curriculum to foster deeper connections is a hallmark of which educational approach?

What is experiential learning?

400

What is a co-curricular activity?

What is Co-curricular activities take place outside the classroom but enhance students’ learning in meaningful ways.

500

What is the epistemological critique that challenges the justified true belief account by presenting cases where these conditions are met, yet knowledge still seems absent?


What is the Gettier problem?

500

How does the concept of narrative identity demonstrate that language and imaginative reconstruction shape our understanding of personal and collective knowledge?

What is the role of narrative identity in constructing knowledge?

500

Toni Morrison says, “Finally she speaks and her voice is soft but stern. “I don’t know”, she says. “I don’t know whether the bird you are holding is dead or alive, but what I do know is that it is in your hands. It is in your hands.” What does that mean?

What is it is your responsibility where it is dead or alive. If it is dead, you have either found it that way or you have killed it. If it is alive, you can still kill it. Whether it is to stay alive, it is your decision. Whatever the case, it is your responsibility.

500

How can the implementation of culturally sustaining pedagogies in learning environments challenge traditional norms and create spaces that support both academic achievement and social-emotional well-being?

What is culturally sustaining pedagogy?

500

What soccer program was the poet representing in “Soccer is Awesome”? 

What is America SCORES?

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