Participation and Discussion

Note-Taking during Discussion

Class discussions present teachers with a number of different challenges, including the often limited number who participate, those who make comments but do so without having done the reading, and the many students who, as Emily Gravett notes, treat class discussions as “down time.” (p.

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Questions and Beginning Students

Questions and Beginning Students

Every year, we enthusiastically welcome incoming students to the academy. I teach at a large research university with a strong and proud commitment to teaching undergraduates. For those of us in professional roles, belonging to the academy means something rich. It includes discussions in hallways

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Listening: A Skill We're Forgetting to Teach

Listening: A Skill We’re Forgetting to Teach

Listening is important—everyone agrees. Would there be any point talking if no one listened? And for most people, it’s a skill with potential for improvement. Increasingly, it’s been seen as an essential professional skill. Sandra Spartaro and Janel Bloch’s excellent article on listening references a

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student participation

Question of the Day Promotes Class Participation

Most of us have experienced the dreaded quiet class. Typically, it’s the class where only a few students speak and it’s always the same three or four. Everyone else sits passively and waits out the clock. For those classes and others, I’ve found a question

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Encouraging Classroom Participation

Encouraging Classroom Participation Through In-Class Reviews

I teach introductory biology classes; the students in these classes are typically new to the discipline at the college level and often find the amount and level of material challenging to absorb and retain. However, many students are nervous about asking or answering the questions

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How to include introverted students in class discussions.

How to Include Introverts in Class Discussion

Would you prefer to go to a party with 50 exciting, brand-new people that you’ve never met before, or would you prefer to have dinner with an old, dear friend? You’ve probably guessed already that extroverts would prefer the party and introverts would prefer dinner

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student participation

Participation: Why Students Don’t

It’s hardly a new subject. There’s plenty of research. There’s lots of advice, suggestions, and possible strategies to try. But with all that, there’s not much participation in a lot of courses. The percentage of students who don’t participate has remained virtually the same for

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class participation

Class Participation: What Behaviors Count?

What counts for participation isn’t always addressed when we talk with students about the importance of participation. It’s easy to assume that everybody knows what’s involved—but is that a safe assumption?

When considering what qualifies as participation, some behaviors come to mind quickly—asking questions, answering questions,

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student engagement

Classroom Discussions: How to Apply the Right Amount of Structure

While preparing for a Teaching Professor Conference session on facilitating classroom discussions (much of which applies to online exchanges), I’ve been reminded yet again of the complexity involved in leading a discussion with students new to the content and unfamiliar with academic discourse. hile preparing

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Class discussions present teachers with a number of different challenges, including the often limited number who participate, those who make comments but do so without having done the reading, and the many students who, as Emily Gravett notes, treat class discussions as “down time.” (p. 75) They relax in their seats, discretely (or not) check their phones, and almost never take notes unless the teacher says something they consider important. Good discussions are education down times. They provide opportunities for students to better understand content by having to speak about it. They provide teachers with feedback indicating levels of understanding (and misunderstanding). They can be part of what transforms a group of students into a learning community. And perhaps most important, they give students the chance to learn from each other. But that doesn’t happen if students aren’t listening to each other. Although Gravett used a number of different approaches to create an environment in which students valued each other’s contributions—she included a statement to that effect on her syllabus, co-created a list of discussion norms with students, and provided advice on responding to the comments of peers—“none of these strategies seemed to increase the extent to which students were actually documenting what others said, as if those were valuable comments worth remembering or reviewing later.” (p. 76) In other words, students were not taking notes on what anybody other than the teacher said. Gravett’s solution was an online weekly reflections assignment, worth 10 percent of the course grade. In their reflections, students responded to three questions similar to those suggested by Stephen Brookfield in his Critical Incident Questionnaire: What was the most important thing you learned from discussion this week? What was the most surprising or unsettling idea you heard in discussion this week and why? What was the contribution from a peer that most inspired or impressed you and why? (p. 77) Students earned full credit for “thoughtful, specific, and timely reflections.” (p. 76) To reinforce the assignment and integrate it into the rest of the course, Gravett encouraged students to write down students’ comments whenever she heard notable ones. “Tyrone makes a really interesting point. It’s one that you might consider writing down.” She also shared content from the reflection papers in class, naming whose comment or insight she was sharing. And she included questions on quizzes and exams based on information exchanged during class discussions. The assignment was a success, documented by a variety of student comments included in the article and by some quantitative data collected via a survey. In discussions in other courses 90 percent of the students reported that they took notes when the instructor said something they considered noteworthy. Only 25 percent reported they did that when a student said something they considered noteworthy. In Gravett’s course, 95 percent of the students were noting in writing what other students said. Is this assignment viable in a large course? Probably not in this form, but certainly with modifications. It need not be a weekly assignment—even doing an assignment like this once or twice might encourage students to start listening to each other a bit more intently. A randomly identified percentage of students could be assigned a reflection paper after each class discussion. Students could only respond to the question that asked about the comment of a peer. It’s definitely an assignment that encourages more intense levels of listening during discussions. Gravett reports some other benefits as well. Students shared these reflection papers online and they started reading and responding to each other’s papers, thereby extending the discussion that had occurred in class. Writing assignments like these, even though they are low-stakes, cannot be completed without a review of the notes taken during the discussion. That means more contact with content and an in-your-face encounter with the quality of your notes. For Gravett, the assignment meant more “just-in-time-teaching” was possible. She found out what students learned during the discussion. Sometimes that resulted in adjusting plans for the coming week. The assignment also gave Gravett some unexpected insights into the lives of her students, and, as a result, she felt as though she got to know her students better. Reference: Gravett, E. O. (2018). Note-taking during discussion: Using a weekly reflection assignment to motivate students to learn from their peers. College Teaching, 66 (2), 75-83. And a few extra thoughts on note-taking during discussion. There are other ways instructors can encourage students to reflect and record the points made during discussions: