Title: Socratic Circles
1Socratic Circles
- A Socratic circle has students working
collaboratively to construct a common vision of
truth and understanding that serves all members
of the group equally.
2Before a Socratic Circle
- Students spend time reading, analyzing, and
annotating a given text. - This is your ticket into the Socratic circle at
the next class meeting.
3The Day of a Socratic Circle
- Students are randomly divided into two concentric
circles an INNER circle and an OUTER circle - Students in the INNER circle read the passage
aloud and then engage in a discussion for
approximately ten minutes, while students in the
OUTER circle silently observe the behavior and
performance of the INNER circle
4- After the approximate ten-minute discussion of
the text, the OUTER circle assesses the INNER
circles performance and gives ten minutes of
feedback for the INNER circle - Students then exchange roles and positions
- The new INNER circle holds a ten-minute
discussion and then receives ten minutes of
feedback from the new OUTER circle
5The Teachers Role in Socratic Circle
- Select the text for discussion
- Keep the discussion of the INNER circle focused
and moving - Direct the feedback of the OUTER circle
- ASSESS and EVALUATE the individual student and
group performances
6Directing the Conversation of the OUTER Circle
- Ask for initial observations rate INNER circle
from scale from 1 to 10. - Providing feedback is not a onetime, isolated
event but an ongoing struggle for improvement,
Socratic circle after Socratic circle.
7Socratic Circles are a DIALOGUE, not a DEBATE
DIALOGUE DEBATE
Collaborative Oppositional
Finding common ground is goal Winning is the goal
Enlarges and possibly changes a participants point of view Affirms a persons own point of view
Causes introspection on ones own position Causes critique of the other position
One searches for strengths in the other position One searches for flaws and weaknesses in the other position
Everyone is part of the solution/dialogue One person or viewpoint wins over the other
Affirms the idea of people learning from each other Affirms the idea of people learning individually in competition with others
Remains open-ended Implies a conclusion
8Three Types of Questions
FACT What does the author say?
INTERPRETATION What does the author mean?
EVALUATION Is it true?
9Goal Setting
- Goals are typically taken directly from the
observations from the inner circle
10Socratic Circle Scorecard5 Outstanding 4 Good 3
Average 2 Below Average 1 Not Acceptable Class
______________ Date _______________ Topic
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Students Name Reading of text and preparation for circle Engaged in discussion and stays on task Supports ideas with references to the text Encourages thinking and participation in others Listens respectfully and builds from ideas of others Presents self and ideas in a civil and proper manner Questions insightfully and uses sound reasoning Accepts more than one point of view on the text
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11Text Annotation
- Circle any unfamiliar words and add denotation
and connotation if applicable - Underline key phrases
- Keep track of the story or idea as it unfolds
- Note word patterns and repetitions or anything
that strikes you as confusing or important - Write questions in margins