I’ve been studying the art and science of questioning for three
decades. In recent years, I’ve talked about this subject at Fortune 500
companies, government
agencies such as NASA, and schools from grade-school level through
university — as well as at gatherings of farmers, accountants, artists,
scientists, soldiers, political operatives, and Hollywood agents. The
interest in questioning cuts across all lines, it seems.
And it should. When we are confronted with almost any demanding
situation, in work or in life, simply taking the time and effort to ask
questions can help guide us to better decisions, fresh ideas, and more
productive actions. But the questions must be the right ones —
the ones that cut to the heart of a complex challenge or that enable us
to see an old problem in a new light. I call these “beautiful
questions.” When we ask beautiful questions, we open up new
possibilities.
Are you capable of asking such questions?
Absolutely; we all are.
Questioning comes naturally to us. When people ask, "How does someone
become a better questioner?" I advise them to take a few
lessons from a true “master questioner” — not Einstein or Socrates, but
rather the typical 4-year-old child. Studies have shown that children at
that age may ask anywhere from one hundred to three hundred questions a
day. (Interestingly, some research shows that a 4-year-old girl asks
even more questions than a boy of that age; she is the ultimate
questioning machine.)
Questioning at these early ages may seem like child’s play, but it’s a
complex, high-order level of thinking. It requires enough awareness to know that one does not know —
and the ingenuity to begin to do something to remedy that. As the
Harvard University-based child psychologist Paul Harris points out,
young children discover early on that the information they seek can be
easily extracted from other human beings, merely by using that certain
combination of words and vocal inflection that forms a question.
If you could peer inside the mind of a questioning child, you’d get a
hint as to why kids seem to enjoy asking “Why?” Merely wondering about
an interesting question activates the regions of the brain
linked to reward processing. Curiosity — the act of wondering — feels
good in and of itself, and thus, questions beget more questions. Think
of curiosity as a condition “like an itch,” says the neuroscientist
Charan Ranganath. And that condition often leads to the action known as
questioning, which is how we scratch the itch.
The 4-year-old child scratches away — until, at some point, she is
told to stop. But at that age, she has no reluctance to ask about
anything and everything — including the most fundamental questions,
those basic “Why?” queries that many of us are loath to ask for fear
of looking stupid. The questioning child isn’t weighed down by
accumulated knowledge, biases, or assumptions about how the world works
and why things are the way they are. Her mind is both open and expansive
— an ideal condition for wondering, inquiring, and growing.
This condition begins changing somewhere around age 5 or 6. The
asking of questions (at least the ones that are verbalized by young
students in school) tends to subside steadily, year by year, according
to research from the nonprofit Right Question Institute, which studies
questioning and devises question-formulation exercises for schools. What
was once a hundred-per-day questioning habit among 4-year-olds dwindles
down to a few questions — or none — among teenagers.
The challenge, then, for adults who want to become better
questioners is to release your inner 4-year-old — that fearless and
imaginative questioner we all used to be. How do you do that? Start by
asking yourself the following five questions.
1. Am I willing to be seen as naïve?
This is one of the secret weapons of the 4-year-old; they are naïve,
and they don’t care who knows it. So they’re willing to ask fundamental
questions without embarrassment. As adults, being able to ask fundamental questions (Why are we doing things the way we’ve been doing them?) can help us break out of habitual thinking and behaviors.
2. Am I comfortable raising questions with no immediate answers?
The most powerful questions — the ones that can really change your
life — are not the kind that can be easily answered on Google. You must
be willing to live with these harder questions and spend time working on
them.
3. Am I willing to move away from what I know?
There’s nothing wrong with having expertise — as long as you don’t
rest on it. A beautiful questioner is also a restless learner,
constantly exploring new areas.
4. Am I open to admitting I might be wrong?
To be a beautiful questioner, you must have enough humility (and
curiosity) to at least consider viewpoints different from your own. This
has always been important, but might be more important than ever in
these polarized times.
5. Am I willing to slow down and consider?
The simplest and most powerful thing that happens when we ask
ourselves questions is that it forces us to think. More specifically,
when we’re working on questions in our minds, we’re engaged in “slow
thinking,” the term used by Nobel Prize-winning psychologist Daniel
Kahneman to describe the kind of deliberate, effortful cognition
that tends to lead to better decisions, choices, and actions. This
might involve something as simple as pausing before making a decision or
pursuing a course of action to ask, "What am I really trying to achieve
here?"
Even if you feel that you already have a knack for questioning, there
are many ways to improve. In “Questionologist” columns to come, I’ll
share specific types of questions that can help you see past your
biases, broaden your thinking, and overcome your fears. We’ll consider
techniques for building a better question and sharing it with others —
including nuances involving tone and phrasing. And we'll look at ways to
encourage others around you to question more (particularly important if
you are, or aspire to be, a leader).
In the meantime, think about the five questions featured above and
ask yourself: How might I find ways to work on each of these areas?
ABOUT AUTHOR
Warren Berger is a longtime journalist and author of The Book of Beautiful Questions.
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