Professional Documents
Culture Documents
To be curious means that you wonder about things. You want to know more. You seek out
knowledge.
Source: February 13, 2017
Elaine
What does it mean to be CURIOUS?
Teaching and Learning
https://ejyoung.com/what-does-it-mean-to-be-curious/
Inquiry
noun: inquiry; plural noun: inquiries; noun: enquiry; plural noun: enquiries
an act of asking for information.
https://www.google.com.ph/search?ei=Ai9lXYLuL5bchwPKxKi4DA&q=inquiry+means&oq=inquiry&gs_l=psy-
ab.1.0.0i67j0i131j0l8.26742.31587..35625...0.2..3.709.5949.2j24j1j5-3j1......0....1..gws-
wiz.....0..0i71j0i19j0i22i30i19.58WTbkKkYJY
Scholarly
adjective: scholarly
involving or relating to serious academic study.
"scholarly journals"
mga kasingkahulugan
academic, educational, scholastic, professorial, pedagogic, pedagogical
"a young woman aspiring to a scholarly career"
having or showing knowledge, learning, or devotion to academic pursuits.
"a scholarly account of the period"
mga kasingkahulugan
learned, erudite, academic, well read, widely read, intellectual, literary, lettered, well educated,
knowledgeable, cultured, cultivated, highbrow
source: google.com
Scholarly or peer-reviewed journal articles are written by scholars or professionals who are experts in
their fields. In the sciences and social sciences, they often publish research results.
(https://guides.library.cornell.edu/scholarlyjournals)
“. . . Scholarly Inquiry classes teach them to the skills to ask good research questions and find the
resources to answer those questions.” (https://oscar.gmu.edu/faculty-staff/discovery-and-inquiry-courses/)
“People learn differently and may hold onto folk or naive knowledge, incorrect concepts,
misunderstandings, false information.”
(Improving Student Learning through Scholarly Inquiry by Peggy Maki)
Available online: https://resources.depaul.edu/teaching-commons/events/fall-forum/Documents/peggy-maki-improving-
learning-scholarly-inquiry-keynote.pdf
Dopamine is one of the brain's neurotransmitters—a chemical that ferries information between neurons.
Dopamine helps regulate movement, attention, learning, and emotional responses. It also enables us not only to
see rewards but to take action to move toward them. Since dopamine contributes to feelings of pleasures and
satisfaction as part of the reward system, the neurotransmitter also plays a part in addiction.
(https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/dopamine).