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Socratic

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Title: Socratic


1
Socratic Seminars
2
The Vision
  • Socrates believed that enabling students to think
    for themselves was more important than filling
    their heads with
    right answers.

3
The Vision
  • Participants seek deeper understanding of complex
    ideas through rigorously thoughtful dialogue,
    rather than by memorizing bits of information.

4
What are Socratic Seminars?
  • Highly motivating form of intellectual and
    scholarly discourse.

5
What are Socratic Seminars?
  • Usually range from 30-50 minutes
  • An effective
    Socratic Seminar
    creates dialogue
    as opposed to
    debate.

6
Starting Dialogue
  • Asking questions is the key!
  • A leader prompts the use of dialogue
  • Participants learn to be less attached to their
    ideas and less reliant on persuasion for
    influencing opinions.
  • Dialogue is a skill of collaboration that enables
    groups to create
    collective thinking.

7
Dialogue is NOT Debate!
8
Four Elements
  • An effective seminar consists of four
    interdependent elements
  • 1. the topic/text being considered
  • 2. the questions raised
  • 3. the seminar leader, and
  • 4. the participants

9
The Text
  • A seminar text can be drawn from readings in
    literature, history, science, math, health, and
    philosophy or from works of art or music.

10
The Question
  • An opening question has no right answer
  • It reflects a genuine curiosity on the part of
    the leader.

Should human embryos be cloned in order to save
lives?
11
The Leader
  • Plays a dual role as leader and participant
  • Consciously leads a thoughtful exploration of the
    ideas in the text.
  • As a seminar participant,
    actively engages in the
    group's exploration of
    the text.

12
The Participants
  • Share responsibility for the quality of the
    seminar.
  • Most effective when
    participants
  • study the text closely
    in advance
  • listen actively

13
The Participants
  • Most effective when participants
  • share their ideas and
    questions in response
    to others
  • search for evidence
    in the text to support
    their ideas

14
Conducting a Fishbowl
  • Divide the class into
    Inner and
    Outer
    circles

15
Responsibilities of the inner circle members
  • Students are to clear desks and display only
    prepared answers to the discussion questions.
  • Students, not the teacher, determine the first
    speaker.
  • A student enters the discussion only when the
    previous speaker indicates that he or she has
    finished.

16
Responsibilities of the outer circle members
  • students in the outer circle are to script as
    much of the discussion content as possible as the
    discussion evolves.
  • If the inner circle decides to reach a consensus,
    students of the outer circle are required to
    summarize and record the consensus

17
Philosophical Chairs
  • Philosophical Chairs differs from Socratic
    Seminar in that it is not dependent on a text
  • Philosophical Chairs focuses on a central
    statement or topic that is controversial.
  • Philosophical Chairs basic format remains the
    same from grade level to grade level,

18
Guidelines for Philosophical Chairs
  • Classroom Setup
  • Chairs/desks are set up facing each other with
    about half facing one way and half facing the
    opposite way.

19
Directions for Philosophical Chairs
  • A statement is presented to the students.
  • Those who agree with the central statement sit on
    one side and those who disagree sit on the other
    side.
  • A mediator, who will remain neutral and call on
    sides to speak, is positioned between the two
    sides

20
Directions for Philosophical Chairs
  • The mediator recognizes someone from the side of
    the classroom that agrees with the central
    statement to begin the discussion with an
    argument in favor of the position stated.
  • Next, the mediator will recognize someone from
    the other side to respond to the argument.

21
Nuclear Power Pros and Cons
22
What do you think?
  • Nuclear Power is the best and most viable
    alternative fuel sources

23
What do you think?
24
Designed by The RHS AVID Team Mr. Earl Hankerson,
Director Mr. Perry L. West. Science Dept.
Chair Adapted and revised from the AVID Socratic
Seminar
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