The following are Miguel Guhlin’s notes on AVID Conference 2005 that took place in Austin, Tx during the week of June 26th. Participants from all around San Antonio ISD, but primarily grades 6-12 as well as 5 members of Instructional Technology Services and members from Advanced Academic Services participated. These notes, photos, and video clips are provided for San Antonio ISD members and others who might benefit from them. An update will be posted for each day for the purposes of sharing what was learned with others, as well as modelling “blogging” and “podcasting,” two new innovative ways to use technology in teaching and learning environments.
Today, we began learning the Socratic Seminar approach. Included are also pictures of the work created. The conference is organized in the following way:
In the morning, you spend time in your particular strand working with folks from all around the nation (world, in some cases). The strand we’re in focuses on Socratic Seminar. In the afternoon, SAISD teachers meet together to develop a campus-specific plan.
BACKGROUND OF SOCRATIC SEMINAR
“Let us examine this question together, my friend, and if you can contradict anything that I say, do so, and I shall be persuaded.”
Socratic Seminar serves as a way to introduce inquiry learning into the classroom. Inquiry immediately engages students with thinking processes. The results, write Socratic Seminar participants, is to enable “student ownership for enlarged understanding of concepts and values.” Some of the basic tenets include the following:
1) Participants begin the learning groups with questions.
2) Participants engage in all levels of critical thinking, from recall of knowledge to evaluation.
3) Participants pursue understanding with mutual respect and civility, mindful of each other’s dignity.
4) Participants are willing to be persuaded by arguments or evidence more powerful than their own and to change their minds in light of fresh insights.
QUESTION DEVELOPMENT
In considering development of questions, Costa’s Model of Intellectual Functioning is considered, as is Bloom’s Taxonomy. Socratic Seminar suggests development of questions at 3 different levels, including the following:
Level 1: questions focus on gathering and recalling information
Appropriate verbs: defining, describing, identifying, listing, naming, observing, reciting, scanning.
Level 2: questions focus on making sense of gathered information.
Verbs: analyzing, comparing, contrasting, grouping, inferring, sequencing, synthesizing
Level 3: questions focus on applying and evaluating information.
Verbs: applying a principle, evaluating, hypothesizing, imagining, judging, predicting, speculating
The obligation of anyone who thinks of himself as responsible is to examine society and try to change it and to fight it–at no matter what risk.
–James Baldwin, “A Talk to Teachers”
SOCRATIC SEMINAR
The purpose of this session is for participants to understand, practice and train others in the effective use of Socratic Seminar Instructional techniques. Our presenter was Ellen McCollum from San Diego, California. She introduced us to the “circle” which characterizes Socratic Seminar on Day 1, but first gave us some background and warm-up activities. This is a rough outline of what occurred:
1) After brief introductions (listen to them here; audio quality isn’t that great but gives you the flavor of meeting people for the first time) from folks all over the United States, with these directions in mind, we created Venn diagrams–in groups of 4-5 adults–about the differences between dialogue and debate (listen to one of the presentations).
Venn Diagrams created: Example 1 | 2 | 3
2) The facilitator established ground rules for behavior in the class; these were called “norms.” They included a wide variety of items. As we discussed these whole group, someone wrote them down on a white sheet of paper and we agreed to adhere to them while we were together.
2) After agreeing to ground rules, she gave us an article to read by Mortimer Adler. The title of the article was Democracy and Education. We sat in a large circle and we each stated a question we had about the article. This was difficult, especially if you were at the end since most folks honed in on particular questions. Some of the key points of the article included the following:
-All children are educable, not just trainable for jobs.
-Universal suffrage and universal schooling are necessary to one another. The first without the other means failure.
-Success in schools must be defined as same quality of schooling for all, as opposed to same quantity of schooling for all.
-”The best education for the best is the best education for all.” (Robert M. Hutchins)
There were many questions about this article, some of them quite profound. Ellen, as facilitator, had everyone share their specific question, then focused in on one question. She really didn’t have a good explanation of WHY she chose that particular question and has later explained it as, “Whatever works for you.”
The resulting discussion took us in many directions and “broke the ice,” so to speak, about the idea of Socratic Seminar. We broke for lunch with a homework assignment.