Creating the Space for Engaged Discussions
It’s a new academic year, and optimism and energy are in abundant
supply. There are new ideas for class, new ways to engage students, and
great questions to wrestle with as the intersections between past and
present have rarely been so obvious. And it all goes swimmingly, it
seems, until the first time we actually launch a discussion. Then those
faces that seemed to be so cheerful–nodding along as we talked about how
our class could be challenging, provocative, even FUN–now stare back
blankly. It was as if posing a question triggered an actual electric
shock that stunned them into a catatonic state. No…wait! Someone looked
up. Eye contact? We look at them hopefully, ready for someone to bravely
interrupt the increasingly awkward silence. They meet our gaze for a
split second, their eyes widen in panic, and all of a sudden there seems
to be something much more compelling to look at on the floor next to
their chair. It’s as if the air goes out of the room. Everyone seemed to
be on board with a discussion-based class until we actually gave them
the chance to embark. Then, abandon ship.
It’s hard to muster the enthusiasm (and increased effort) necessary
for an active, collaborative class environment when none of our students
seem to reciprocate. We know an active learning pedagogy is better for
student learning, but we also face circumstances like this example, or
of large classes, or of rooms with desks bolted to the floor in rows.
Our discipline has so many avenues into a fruitful conversation with
students: primary sources, images, “what-if” questions, debates,
exploration of difficult, controversial, or morally and ethically
complex issues. But those conversations can’t happen if only one party
participates. The key question for so much of our teaching, then, is
what do we do when discussion dies?
I’d like to suggest that a flagging discussion, or one that fails to
launch entirely, is most often the fault of something other than our
students. Sure, there are some students who haven’t done the reading or
who refuse to participate come hell or high water. But most of our
students are receptive to at least the idea of engaged, active learning.
The key is to turn that general willingness into specific practices.
Here are some strategies and methods that have proven effective for me
across survey and upper-level courses, small and large classes, in rooms
that may or may not allow any deviation from the regimented
rows-and-columns arrangement.
The first thing to consider is our own actions during and immediately
after posing the “discussion-starter” question. Have we asked a
question that is sufficiently open-ended to invite further conversation?
In other words, are we soliciting actual discussion, or only mere
recitation? A good, complex question that sparks thoughtful
engagement–which is the ideal–is not one that can be immediately
answered by our students. We know this in the abstract, but research suggests that instructors fear prolonged silences more than they value students’ having the time to think.
If we wait a second or two and, hearing nothing, either answer the
question ourselves or move on to something else, all we’re doing is
showing our students that if they don’t answer a question, we’ll do it
for them. And you can guess what the results will be. One of the most
common ways in which class discussions flag is a lack of Mary Budd Rowe
called “wait-time” and “think-time.” We need to provide enough of both
after posing a question or problem for our students to process and
determine how to best articulate their response. A simple fix is to
mentally count off ten seconds after asking a question (which I
guarantee will feel much longer than that initially) to allow
for students to think and respond. If the silence persists, then we can
go back and rephrase or clarify the question, but it’s essential for us
to show our students that silence and time for thought are not only OK,
but encouraged. This is one small fix that can pay much larger dividends
in the quality of our discussions.
Along these lines, consider building in a short period of
free-writing to launch discussions. This is my go-to method for
discussions in all of my courses now. I ask students to get out
something to write with–pencil or pen, laptop or tablet, clay tablet and
cuneiform stylus–and pose my question. I tell them they should jot down
ideas, notes, sentences, whatever helps them organize their thoughts.
After two minutes or so, I ask them to share their ideas. What I like
about this technique is that students tend to provide deeper and more
analytic answers having had the time to think and write before being
asked to share. Students who are less verbally assertive, those who may
not jump right into a discussion if I just ask a question and wait for
responses right away, are more confident about participating with the
chance to think intentionally about how they want to articulate their
ideas. And if there is that dreaded drawn-out silence, calling on
someone to share their thoughts comes across much less like a “gotcha”
strategy to the students, since everyone had a chance to write
something. Again, this is a fairly simple technique that brings much
larger results, in the form of richer and more sustained discussions
with a wider range of participants.
For larger classes (anything over 30-40, really), students–even the
more confident and assertive ones–tend to be much less likely to
participate in a discussion where the instructor tosses out a question
and waits for responses. What works well in a smaller class where
students quickly come to know one another does not work at all in an
impersonal lecture hall. But that doesn’t mean discussion isn’t a viable
option, but it needs to be facilitated and encouraged differently. One
useful technique is to work from the individual student outwards,
scaffolding the discussion and allowing it to emerge more organically
from smaller units, as opposed to expecting discussion to spring
fully-formed from a 200-person lecture hall. After posing the question
(preferably putting it up on the screen or board for students to refer
to), have students free write a response for a minute or two. Then, have
them work in groups of something like 2-4 people and share their
thoughts with the other group members. To this point, it’s the same
procedure as the venerable think-pair-share activity present in so many
teachers’ toolboxes. But these groups have a more direct task-they must
select a response (or synthesize one from multiple members) that speaks
for the entire group. So now we have students who are explaining and
defending their ideas to others, which leverages some of the learning
potential that we know can emerge from a peer instruction model.
At this point, if the class is small enough, each group can appoint a
spokesperson to present their thoughts to the rest of the class. Or, you
can combine these small group units by asking groups to pair with
another group, adding another layer to the discuss-defend process. Those
larger groups then report out to everyone. What this technique does is
break down a larger impersonal environment that’s not conducive to
conversation into personal, then small interpersonal, units that most
definitely are. Moreover, the process by which students explain and
defend their position to peers contains all sorts of cognitive benefits,
including deeper understanding and better retention of the material. It
should be noted that more complex, perhaps multi-part, questions–and
questions that have no clearly defined “right” answer–work best for this
exercise.
These are just three basic techniques that require little to no
investment of time that can produce the results we hope to achieve as we
imagine our ideal class discussions. The common denominator for all of
them is the creation of space for students to think, process, and then
articulate ideas they’ve worked with in complex and higher-order ways.
That space is essential for good discussions, and is also contingent
upon classroom climate. Have we created an environment where all of our
students feel comfortable sharing ideas and taking intellectual risks?
Do we, as instructors, insure that discussions are equitable–that we
aren’t only calling on male students to contribute, for example? (Gender is one of principal areas in
which inequities occur in the college classroom.) If we take the time
to thoughtfully and intentionally construct spaces in which our students
can engage with both complex ideas and one another, we can create a
class that hums with conversation rather than drones with lectured
monologue.
Note: two invaluable resources on fostering effective class discussions are Stephen Brookfield and Stephen Preskill, Discussion as a Way of Teaching: Tools and Techniques for College Classrooms, 2nd ed. (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2005); and Jay R. Howard, Discussion in the College Classroom: Getting Your Students Engaged and Participating in Person and Online (San Francisco” Jossey-Bass, 2015).
Kevin Gannon is the director of the Center for Excellence in
Teaching and Learning and a professor of history at Grand View
University. He blogs at thetattooedprof.com and is on Twitter @thetattooedprof.
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