Statements A, B and D are correct, while C and E are incorrect. A is true because simple initial questions connect new content to what learners already know. B is true as progressively more complex questions can lead students from recall to analysis and evaluation. D is true since a coherent sequence of questions structures the lesson. C is false because random questioning often fragments attention, and E is false because follow-up questions, when used thoughtfully, clarify and extend understanding. Therefore, A, B and D only is the correct combination.
Option A:
Option A includes A, B and D, presenting a clear staircase from prior knowledge to higher-order thinking within an organised flow, and correctly excludes C and E, which disrupt focus and discourage elaboration. As it contains all and only the true statements, this option is correct.
Option B:
Option B groups A and B but omits D, failing to acknowledge the organisational role of sequenced questions in structuring communication. Thus, A and B only is incomplete.
Option C:
Option C combines B and D but leaves out A, ignoring the function of easy initial questions in activating schema. Without this starting point, B and D only does not fully describe effective sequencing.
Option D:
Option D assembles A, C and D, but C wrongly claims that randomness improves focus. The presence of this false statement makes A, C and D only invalid.
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