Socratic Seminar

Rationale

The goal of a Socratic seminar is for students to help one another understand the ideas, issues, and values reflected in a specific text. Students are responsible for facilitating a discussion around ideas in the text rather than asserting opinions. Through a process of listening, making meaning, and finding common ground students work toward shared understanding rather than trying to prove a particular argument. A Socratic seminar is not used for the purpose of debate, persuasion, or personal reflection, as the focus is on developing shared meaning of a text.

Process

Step one: Selecting an appropriate text

Socratic seminars are based on close textual analysis so it is important to select a text that provides ample avenues for interpretation and discussion. If you choose a simple text where the meaning of it is fairly straightforward, there won’t be much for students to discuss. Also, the text should not be too long to read closely in the allotted amount of time. Often teachers select a text ranging from one paragraph to one page.

Step two: Students prepare for the seminar

Before beginning the seminar, it is essential that students have time to prepare ideas. Students should annotate the text before the start of the class discussion. (If students do not know how to annotate a text, you should model this for them.) Often teachers assign a discussion leader who generates a few open-ended questions that can be used to begin the seminar.

Step three: Contracting

Socratic seminars have rules that may not apply to other forms of discussion, so before beginning the seminar, it is important that everyone is aware of the norms. Before beginning the seminar it is also important to remind students that the purpose of the seminar is not to debate or prove a point, but to more deeply understand what the author was trying to express in the text. Also, if you have never done a Socratic seminar with your students before, you might spend a few moments brainstorming the qualities that would make for a great seminar. These qualities or criteria can be placed on rubric and used to evaluate the seminar at the end of the class period. Criteria you might use to evaluate a Socratic seminar include: engagement (everyone listening and sharing), respect (no interruptions or put-downs), meaning-making (students understand the text more deeply at the end of the seminar), and use of evidence (comments always refer back to the text).

Step four: The Socratic seminar

A Socratic seminar often begins with the discussion leader, a student or the teacher, asking an open-ended question. A typical Socratic seminar opening prompt is: What do you think this text means? Silence is fine. It may take a few minutes for students to warm-up. Sometimes teachers organize a Socratic seminar like a fishbowl, with some students participating in the discussion and the rest of the class having specific jobs as observers. Socratic seminars should be given at least fifteen minutes and can often last thirty minutes or more. As students become more familiar with Socratic seminars, they are able to discuss a text for longer periods of time without any teacher-intervention.

Step five: Reflection and to evaluate

After the Socratic seminar, give students the opportunity to evaluate the seminar in general and their own performance specifically. This can be an in-class or a homework assignment. You can create evaluation forms to help with this step. Students can also reflect on their comfort level during the seminar and high points of engagement and disengagement. Reflecting on the seminar process helps students improve their ability to participate in future discussions. Here are some questions you might discuss or write about when reflecting on the seminar:

    • At any point did the seminar revert into a debate/discussion rather than dialogue? If so, how did the group handle this?
    • What evidence did you see of people actively listening and building on others' ideas?
    • How has your understanding of this text been affected by the ideas explored in this seminar?
    • What would you like to do differently as a participant the next time you are in a seminar?

Adapted from Facing History and Ourselves: Socratic Seminar