Title: Seminars and Deliberations
1Seminars and Deliberations
Strategies for Engaging Students in Civil
Discourse
2Why Lead Students from Idiocy to Citizenship
- Helps students understand the value of public
interest versus personal interest - Promotes appreciation of diversity in ideas
- Teaches Perspective-taking
- Promotes Moral Development
- Promotes better understanding of academic content
- Makes connections to life outside of school
3Forms of Discussion
- Cognitive-Moral Dilemma Discussions (Kohlberg,
1971) - Seminars and Deliberations (Parker, 2003)
- Structured Academic Controversy (Johnson and
Johnson, 1995 Larson, 1996) - Socratic Seminar (Adler, 1982)
4Source Parker, Walter C. (2003). Teaching
Democracy Unity and Diversity in Public Life.
New York Teachers College Press
5Socratic Seminar
- Purpose enlarged understanding of the ideas,
issues, and values in or prompted by the text - Text Can come in different forms
- historical novel
- primary source document
- Essay
- photo
- Film
- Play
- painting
6Selecting a powerful text
- One that arouses discussants intellectually and
morally - Disagreements about meaning broaden horizons as a
shared meaning is constructed - Typically deal with text excerpts (4-5 pages)
which leads to more intensive work over a smaller
ground.
7Preparing to lead a seminar classroom management
decisions
- Arrangement of students
- Whole-class
- Fish bowl
- Microseminars
- How to hold students accountable for completing
the reading? - Is participation in the seminar required and
graded?
8Preparing to lead a seminar classroom management
decisions
- What norms will be posted
- Dont raise hands
- Listen to and build on the comments of others
- Invite others into the discussion
- Support opinions by referring to passages in the
text - Tie your knowledge of the struggle for civil
rights into your interpretation of Kings letter. - Teaching students how to challenge or seek
clarification from one another - I have a different opinion
- I disagree, let me explain
9Preparing to lead a seminar the opening question
- Most important part of seminar facilitation
- Should be interpretative not factual or
evaluative - Is concerned with the meaning of the ideas,
issues, and values in a text. - Other questions (e.g., evaluative) can be used
later.
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11Debriefing a Seminar
- Did we achieve the purpose
- Ask for each participant to make an observation
about the seminar - Problems that can be addressed immediately or in
the next seminar should be clearly identified and
addressed. - Students could be asked to write a follow-up
essay expanding on their original understanding.
12Deliberative Discussion
- Purpose Deciding on a plan of action to solve a
problem - Central Activity
- Clarifying the problem
- Considering Alternatives
- Opening Question What should we do about this?
- Some overlap with Seminars but the purposes and
emphases are distinct
13During a Discussion of a Controversial Issue
- Am I listening to what other people are saying or
am I missing important points? - Am I making claims clearly and supporting them
with facts? - Am I critiquiting ideas not individuals and being
respectful of others viewpoints? - Am I helping to develop a shared understanding of
the problem or issue
14During a Discussion of a Controversial Issue
- Provide an overview of the controversy pro and
con - Assign students evenly into pro or con position
and groups of four (with a pair representing each
position) - In pairs of similar position discuss best reasons
for support (or not) - Reassign students into pairs of opposing
positions and explore best reasons for support
(or not) - Invite students to establish their own position
and hold large class discussion - Write a dialogic essay reflecting on the
controversy
155 Conditions for Ideal Deliberation
- Students are engaged in integrated
decision-making discussions that involve genuine
value conflicts that arise out of relating to one
another at school - Discussion group is diverse enough that students
have the benefit of reasoning and social
perspectives different from their own. - The discussion group is free of domination --
gross or subtle - The discussion leader is skilled at comprehending
and presenting reasoning and perspectives that
are missing, countering conventional ideas with
critical thinking , and advocating position that
are inarticulate or being drummed out of
consideration - Discussions are dialogic
- Source Parker, Walter (2005). Teaching against
idiocy. Phi Delta Kappan. January
16Bibliography
- Adler, M. (1982). The paideia proposal. New York
McMillian - Kohlberg, L. Turiel, E. (1971). Moral
development and moral education. In G. Lesser,
ed. Psychology and educational practice. Scott
Foresman. - Johnson, D. W., Johnson, R. T. (1995). Creative
controversy Intellectual challenge in the
classroom (3rd ed.). Edina, MN Interaction Book
Company. - Parker, Walter C.(2003). Teaching Democracy
Unity and Diversity in Public Life. New York
Teachers College Press.
17Resources
- For Discussion Strategies
- Kohlbergs Cognitive-Moral Development
- http//tigger.uic.edu/lnucci/MoralEd/
- Deliberation Structured Academic Controversy
- http//www.cooplearn.org/pages/academic.html
- Seminars Socratic Seminar
- http//www.studyguide.org/socratic_seminar.htm
- Sources for Powerful Texts
- Zinn, Howard and Anthony Arnove (2004). Voices of
the American People. Seven Stories Press New
York. - Ravitch, Diane. (1990). The American Reader.
Harper Collins New York - Sources for films, books and other materials
- http//socialstudies.com/