Thanks to its partnership with publisher Eye on Education, EducationWorld is pleased to present this advice from the professional development session Using Seminars for 21st Century Literacy by Terry Roberts. The session is now available on demand.
In this article, learn some of Roberts' suggestions for creating collaborative discussions that meet Common Core requirements and get all students participating and thinking at higher levels. He particularly recommends Paideia Seminars, in which students have open-ended discussions about challenging texts. For more information, check out his book, Teaching Critical Thinking: Using Seminars for 21st Century Thinking, with coauthor Laura Billings.
The Common Core State Standards require that students "engage effectively in a range of collaborative discussions…building on others’ ideas and expressing their own clearly" (The Common Core State Standards, p. 49). Students should learn how to acknowledge information presented by others, synthesize multiple perspectives, and adjust their own views if necessary. Students need to learn these discussion skills now, since they will be required to use them in college and in 21st century careers. The jobs of the future will require collaboration, discussion, and problem-solving as never before.
Teachers, however, have to be careful not to divide students into groups, give them a topic, and assume that they know how to carry on an effective discussion. Speaking and listening skills must be explicitly taught at first. Educators have to model good speaking and listening. They also have to teach students metacognition. Students must become aware of their own speaking and listening habits, set goals, and reflect on those goals. For example, teachers can have students set any of the following goals before a class discussion:
Goals for Listening
Goals for Speaking
After a discussion, teachers can have students go back to the goal(s) they identified and rate themselves on a scale from 1 to 5 in relationship to their goal(s). Students should explain their ratings.
Teachers can also keep track of student participation. During the discussion, educators can use a map (seating-chart format) to take notes on talk turns. After the discussion, they can use the map to analyze who spoke the most, and who was quiet and needs more practice speaking.
Throughout this process, the teacher is doing the coaching but is not just telling students how they rate; students are thinking about it on their own, too. In this way, students are taking charge of their own thinking and learning. With practice, students will be able to have independent discussions with less and less teacher support.
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