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Originally published in November 2024
Social Interactions are vital in our classrooms for deep learning and academic achievement as well as skill development in civic dialogue (Schneider and Preckel, 2017; Hoidn and Klemencic, 2021; Davis and Arend, 2013; Bennion, 2024). Yet, students bring with them different backgrounds, perspectives, and lived experiences as well as different levels of self and social identity awareness, shaping unique classroom dynamics each semester (Ambrose et. al, 2010; Derek Bok Center, 2021). Student contributions to discussions can support each other in critical thinking, self-awareness, appreciation for diverse perspectives, and strengthen their interpersonal skills, but they can also be disruptive, uninformed, or harmful and produce a negative effect on the learning environment, including silencing or cooling the contributions of others (Souza et. al, 2016; Chike, 2021).
While there are potential challenges that exist for all classroom interactions, it can feel particularly risky to hold ‘difficult discussions’, those involving materials or analysis of social inequities, dominant narratives, histories, politics, and power (Ahad-Legardy and Poon, 2018). Students may or may not be open to learning about opposing perspectives or new information, they may have strong emotions on particular topics, or they may have adopted powerful, singular narratives about Others (and ‘Us’) that frame how they interpret the world around them (Shalka, 2024). Knowing that our classrooms are not siloed from the wider political, social, historical conflicts and contexts, including polarization, it may feel difficult to prepare for and manage classroom discussions with heightened attention and strong perspectives. And yet, these are precisely the discussions that have the greatest potential for learning and transformation.
Effective practices in preparing the classroom learning community for openness to engage with difference and difficult material tell us that we should start before the course begins with planning for discussions in our course design (Bell, Goodman, Oullett, 2017). However, it’s November – is there anything we can adopt at this point in the term? It’s not too late to approach your classroom discussion this term with new tools. We do hope that instructors see themselves or find something useful in the strategies below to use now or save for later and welcome further conversations to discuss ideas, concerns, contexts and supports.
While it may be best placed as an exercise at the beginning of the term, if you have had a challenging classroom climate or are about to start ‘hot topics’ in your term, setting some classroom guidelines is an effective approach to achieve respectful learning through dialogue. These guidelines not only support students in thinking about how their social interactions may impact the learning community, they also give instructors a resource to remind students of this common opening understanding when discussions derail.
Instructors may choose to set the guidelines themselves or begin with guidelines and invite students to co-construct with their perspectives and additions. For example, you may choose these starting guidelines:
Instructors can then prompt students to share their perspectives using the following example questions in an Exit Ticket (a cue card, a Zoom poll, or a MyLS survey online) and discuss the comments and any revisions with students in the following class. This provides an opportunity for students to share their own values, thoughts, and concerns about learning through discussion in higher education at this moment.
One of the most common ways that discussions become challenging is through student contributions that act as dialogue blockers. A dialogue blocker is “the way some students block or divert dialogue as a defensive response to perspectives they find uncomfortable or challenging.” It can “function rhetorically to silence a perspective or divert the conversation away from a critical insight” (University of Michigan, 2022; informed by K. Obear). These include comments that:
Instructors can prepare for dialogue blockers by building their toolkit of approaches and responses to support learning in the discussion and manage the relationships in your classroom. Below are some options, phrasing, and strategies for navigating difficult conversations that you might adopt depending on your teaching and learning context.