We will spend most of our class time in discussion. Full participation in discussions is crucial for learning in this format and will allow students to process what they have learned. Furthermore you will be writing brief reflection essays following each discussion to illustrate your evolving thought on the discussion materials and what was said during the reflection time.
What is/are the central point(s) presented in the reading? What is/are the main ethical question(s) being asked?
What do you think? Do you agree or disagree? In part or in whole? Do you think these are important questions to be asked? Why or why not?
What are some good points raised by your classmates during discussion? How have you adjusted your thinking in response to these points?
What are some big questions that you are still grappling with? What feels unresolved to you? What types of information might you need to make progress on these remaining questions?
*** #1 and #2 should be done BEFORE you come to class for the discussion
a.k.a. Socratic Circles
Basic Structure: Students prepare by reading a text or group of texts and writing some higher-order discussion questions about the text. On seminar day, students sit in a circle and an introductory, open-ended question is posed by the teacher or student discussion leader. From there, students continue the conversation, prompting one another to support their claims with textual evidence. There is no particular order to how students speak, but they are encouraged to respectfully share the floor with others. Discussion is meant to happen naturally and students do not need to raise their hands to speak. This overview of Socratic Seminar from the website Facing History and Ourselves provides additional information.
Basic Structure: Another great idea from Sarah Brown Wessling, this is a small-group discussion strategy that gives students exposure to more of their peers’ ideas and prevents the stagnation that can happen when a group doesn’t happen to have the right chemistry. Students are placed into a few groups of 4-6 students each and are given a discussion question to talk about. After sufficient time has passed for the discussion to develop, one or two students from each group rotate to a different group, while the other group members remain where they are. Once in their new group, they will discuss a different, but related question, and they may also share some of the key points from their last group’s conversation. For the next rotation, students who have not rotated before may be chosen to move, resulting in groups that are continually evolving.
a.k.a. Pyramid Discussion
Basic Structure: Students begin in pairs, responding to a discussion question only with a single partner. After each person has had a chance to share their ideas, the pair joins another pair, creating a group of four. Pairs share their ideas with the pair they just joined. Next, groups of four join together to form groups of eight, and so on, until the whole class is joined up in one large discussion.
Variations: This structure could simply be used to share ideas on a topic or used to reach consensus.
Simply have students think about their response to a question, form a pair with another person, discuss their response, then share it with the larger group. Here is a whole post to think-pair-share; everything you need to know about it is right there.
This protocol has students come up with their own Thoughts, lingering Questions, and Epiphanies from an assigned reading. This simple method can generate some of the richest conversations!