Discussion
Discussions are an effective and important teaching technique, especially with adult learners.
A discussion is
“the action or process of talking about something in order to reach a decision or to exchange ideas” (Oxford Languages and Google).
Why Use Discussion?
- Engage learners as “co-constructors of knowledge”
- Share thinking and broaden conversation
- Address ideas and concepts collaboratively
- Make learning active
- Build community
Use Discussion When You Want Learners to
- Develop awareness and understanding of issues
- Keep an open mind when exploring topics
- Think critically, problem solve
- Apply knowledge to new situations
- Actively listen and respond to others
- Examine and share perspectives and attitudes, receive feedback on their own
- Integrate new knowledge into their own perspectives
How to Engage Learners in Discussion
- Plan ahead for discussion, share purpose and expectations
- Involve students in discussion on the first day
- Ask an open-ended or focus question to get discussion started
- Give learners a chance to think
- Provide opportunities for discussion periodically during class
- Set expectations of inclusion, respectful consideration of all perspectives
- Set tone, establish guidelines for discussion, model active listening
- Use icebreakers to increase comfort level
- Use a visual to help direct discussion (slide, chart, map, picture, …)
- Use breakout groups for discussion if the class is large
- Debrief, summarize at close of discussion
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