discussion as a way of teaching stephen brookfield

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Discussion as a Discussion as a Way of Way of Teaching Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

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Page 1: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Discussion as a Way Discussion as a Way ofof TeachingTeaching

STEPHEN BROOKFIELDSTEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Page 2: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Why Discussions Fail

• Unprepared Students

• Unrealistic Expectations

• No Ground Rules

• Reward Systems Askew

• No Teacher Modeling

Page 3: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Creating Ground Rules

• Individuals reflect on features of best & worst discussions they’ve experienced

• Groups discuss commonly agreed features of best & worst discussions

• For each feature group asks how can this be encouraged &/or eliminated

• Class creates ground rules with teacher assistance (the 3 person rule, rotating roles, building on others’ contributions, providing evidence)

Page 4: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Circle of Voices

Individuals reflect on the discussion topic (1-3 minutes)Individuals reflect on the discussion topic (1-3 minutes) Participants go round the circle in order - each person has Participants go round the circle in order - each person has

up to 1 minute of uninterrupted air time to give their up to 1 minute of uninterrupted air time to give their viewpoint on the topic. No interruptions are allowed.viewpoint on the topic. No interruptions are allowed.

Move into free discussion with the ground rule that every Move into free discussion with the ground rule that every comment offered must somehow refer back to a comment comment offered must somehow refer back to a comment made by made by someone elsesomeone else in the opening circle of voices. in the opening circle of voices. This need This need NOTNOT be agreement - it can be a disagreement, a be agreement - it can be a disagreement, a question, an elaboration or extension, an illustration, and question, an elaboration or extension, an illustration, and so on.so on.

Page 5: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

3 PERSON RULE

ONCE YOU HAVE SPOKEN YOU MAY NOT MAKE ANOTHER COMNTRIBUTION UNTIL AT LEAST 3 OTHERS HAVE SPOKEN - UNLESS SOMEONE ASKS YOU DIRECTLY TO EXPAND ON YOUR COMMENT

Page 6: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

SPIRAL CONVERSATION

ONCE YOU HAVE SPOKEN YOU DO NOT SPEAK AGAIN UNTIL EVERYONE IN THE GROUP HAS CONTRIBUTED. FACILITATOR MONITORS THIS PROCESS - LATER CONTRIBUTORS CAN AGREE, DISAGREE OR PASS

Page 7: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Conversational MovesBring 3x5 cards to class with moves typed on each of them.

Participants choose 1 of these cards randomly.EXAMPLES OF SPECIFIC MOVESAsk a question or make a comment that shows you are interested in

another’s commentsMake a comment that underscores the link between 2 previous

contributionsMake a comment clearly building on what someone else has said -

make this link explicitMake a summary observation on a recurring theme in the discussionExpress appreciation for how another’s comments have helped your

understandingDisagree with someone in a respectful way

Page 8: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Conversational RolesConversational Roles

Problem PoserProblem Poser Reflective Reflective

AnalystAnalyst ScroungerScrounger UmpireUmpire DetectiveDetective

Devil’s Devil’s AdvocateAdvocate

Theme SpotterTheme Spotter Textual FocuserTextual Focuser Evidential Evidential

AssessorAssessor

Page 9: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Hatful of Quotes

Type out 5-6 provocative quotes from assigned reading on a 3x5 card (each quote will be on several cards)

Put these in a hat & have participants choose a card at random

Participants take turns (at their choosing) to respond to these quotes - or to earlier comments on these quotes

Page 10: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Quotes to Affirm & Challenge

Each participant brings in a quote she wishes to affirm, & one she wishes to challenge, from the assigned reading

Quotes to affirm - resonate with experience, explain difficult concepts clearly, add significant new information, are cogently expressed, are rhetorically powerful etc.

Quotes to challenge - immoral/unethical, poorly expressed, factually wrong, contradict experience

Quotes are shared in small groups & each group chooses ONE to affirm & ONE to challenge

In large group conversation the small group communicates rationales for each of these choices

Page 11: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Circular Response(Eduard Lindeman)

Individuals reflect on a topic for discussionForm into circles of 6-8 One person starts by giving her reflections on the topic. Up

to 1 minute allowed - no interruptions Person to left of 1st speaker goes next - whatever she says

MUST somehow refer to/build on previous speaker’s comments (can be a disagreement or express confusion). Up to 1 minute allowed - no interruptions

Process continues leftwards around the circle with people speaking in order until all have participated

Group moves into open conversation with no particular ground rules in force

Page 12: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

SnowballingSnowballing

People spend time individually reflecting on People spend time individually reflecting on the topicthe topic

Form into pairs & share reflectionsForm into pairs & share reflections Pairs form into quartetsPairs form into quartets Quartets form into octetsQuartets form into octets

AND SO ON & SO ON!!AND SO ON & SO ON!!

(An alternative way to move from small to (An alternative way to move from small to whole group discussion) whole group discussion)

Page 13: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Newsprint Dialogue• Small groups put their deliberations on newsprint

sheets - no reporter is chosen to report these out• Newsprint sheets are then posted around the room &

blank sheets posted next to each sheet• Each participant takes a marker & wanders by

herself around the room - she writes her questions, reactions, agreements etc. directly onto the sheets or on the blanks posted next to them

• Groups reassemble at their postings to see what others have written

Page 14: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

STRUCTURED SILENCESTRUCTURED SILENCE

Every 15 minutes students write individually on 3x5 cards ONE of the following - most important point, most puzzling point, question they’d most like to discuss, something new they’ve learned - in the discussion so far.

Cards shuffled & responses read out by different students

Every 15 minutes students write individually on 3x5 cards ONE of the following - most important point, most puzzling point, question they’d most like to discuss, something new they’ve learned - in the discussion so far.

Cards shuffled & responses read out by different students

Page 15: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Rotating StationsRotating Stations

Small groups record their deliberations on newsprint Small groups record their deliberations on newsprint sheets and hang these on the wall - a blank sheet sheets and hang these on the wall - a blank sheet hangs next to each group’s postinghangs next to each group’s posting

Staying in their small groups, each group visits the Staying in their small groups, each group visits the posting next to theirs - as a group they post their posting next to theirs - as a group they post their reactions to the posting on the blank sheetsreactions to the posting on the blank sheets

Group’s rotate until they arrive at their own posting. Group’s rotate until they arrive at their own posting. They review all the previous groups’ commentsThey review all the previous groups’ comments

Whole class discussion follows on how groups reacted Whole class discussion follows on how groups reacted to other groups’ postingsto other groups’ postings

Page 16: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Speech policy

• Silence is allowed and will not be interpreted as mental disengagement, lack of intelligence or lack of commitment

• Speech will not be interpreted as a sign of intelligence, extreme engagement or superlative diligence

(This helps take the performance anxiety off students’shoulders)

Page 17: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Mutual Invitation(Eric Law - The Wolf Shall dwell with the Lamb)

Facilitator begins by sharing her views on the topic

Facilitator chooses who will speak next - this person can pass but then chooses who will speak in their turn

No-one can interrupt the chosen speaker

Once all have spoken participants move into open discussion with no ground rules

Page 18: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Critical Conversation Protocol

Storyteller tells the tale - no interruptions Detectives ask questions about story Detectives report out assumptions they hear Detectives offer alternative interpretations Participants do an experiential audit (what

have we learned, would do differently etc.)

Umpire enforces ground rules throughout

Page 19: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Critical Incident Questionnaire Moment most engaged as a learner Moment most distanced as a learner Most affirming/helpful action Most puzzling/confusing action What surprised you most These are anonymously completed - the instructor reads

these & reports main findings at start of next class with time for discussion (if needed)

Page 20: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Learning Audit

• As a result of today’s discussion … What do you know that you didn’t know

this time last week? What can you do that you couldn’t do this

time last week? What could you teach someone else to

know or do that you couldn’t teach them this time last week?

Page 21: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

What Would it Take?

• Former resisters testified to its utility

• Faculty modeled their own participation

• My silence was not misconstrued

• Open - not a guessing game of ‘what the teacher thinks’

• Group developed & observed ground rules

• Participation was assessed by multiple indicators

Page 22: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Critical Debate

Motion is framed & participants volunteer to work on teams to draft arguments that either support or oppose the motion

Facilitator switches teams!Teams conduct debate w/rebuttal timeDebrief the debate - assumptions that were

confirmed & challenged, new viewpoints, overlooked evidence

Page 23: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

Discussion Inventory

Tell students you reserve 5-10 minutes at the end of the discussion to offer your thoughts

On a notepad record:- - clear errors of fact or understanding, - perspectives that are ignored, - oppositional views that are smothered

Articulate these for 5-10 minutes before giving participants ‘the last word’ & the CIQ

Page 24: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

GRADING FOR PARTICIPATION:

BEHAVIORAL INDICATORS Ask a question of a peer that draws out

their thinkingBring in a resource not covered in the

syllabus that adds new info. or ideasMake a comment that underscores the

link between 2 people’s commentsUse body language to show interest in a

person’s contribution

Page 25: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

PARTICIPATION (II)

Post an online comment that summarizes our discussion or suggests a new direction

Make a comment (online is ok) about how you found another’s comments useful or interesting. Be as specific as possible.

Contribute something that builds on what another has said - be explicit about how you are doing this

Page 26: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

PARTICIPATION (III)

• Make a comment on the CIQ or online that helps us examine discussion dynamics

• Ask a cause and effect question• Express appreciation for how the

discussion has helped you understand something better (online is OK). Be specific about exactly what was helpful.

• Summarize several people’s comments

Page 27: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

NOMINATING QUESTIONS

Small groups come up with 1-2 questions they want to discuss further

Groups post questions on posters or black/white board

Students individually put a check against 2 questions they would like to discuss more

Whole class discussion is structured around questions with most votes

Page 28: Discussion as a Way of Teaching STEPHEN BROOKFIELD

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Discussion as a Way of Teaching: Tools & Techniques for Democratic Classrooms

Brookfield & Preskill (2006)

Education, Democracy & Discussion Bridges (1988)

Active Talk: The Effective Use of Discussion in Learning Van Ments (1990)

Discussion-Based Online Teaching to Enhance Student Learning

Bender (2003)