SOCRATIC SEMINARS MADE EASY*

The Literacy Cookbook COVEROne terrific method for training students in how to conduct intelligent conversations is Socratic Seminars.  Students learn how to use effective habits of discussion, explain their ideas, and support them with evidence (Take THAT, Common Core Standards!).  Different educators have different ways of conducting Socratic Seminars.  Here is my favorite recipe, and please note that I have made all of the resource documents available for FREE on the TLC “Socratic Seminars” page:

  1. Direct four students to sit in the middle of the room, circled by the rest of the class.  Everyone in the class has read the same text (story, article, editorial, chapter…) or undergone the same experience (such as a field trip or science lab); these four are responsible for discussing a given set of questions about it for a given amount of time (I recommend 10 minutes).  NOTE: They are the only ones who speak; even you will not say a word once the discussion has begun.  See the TLC “Socratic Seminars” page for the following documents: Socratic Seminar Questions on Persuasive Texts and Socratic Seminar Questions on Short Stories.  Also, consider adapting questions from the Book Talk Project for Class Novel; each group can discuss a different chapter.
  2. At the same time, select four others in the outside circle to observe the four participants; the observers will complete a checklist and give feedback on their designated participant’s performance.  See the TLC “Socratic Seminars” page for Socratic Seminar Observation Checklist.
  3. Everyone else in the class takes guided notes on the discussion.  (NOTE: Sample questions for guided notes are included in the question files, Socratic Seminar Questions on Persuasive Texts and Socratic Seminar Questions on Short Stories.)
  4. Use a detailed rubric to score each of the discussants.  See the TLC “Socratic Seminars” page for Socratic Seminar Rubric.
  5. After the discussion, invite the observers to share a few positive comments, then provide your own specific constructive feedback so that everyone in the room will learn more about how to do well.
  6. Lather, rinse, repeat.  Rotate the participants.  Although you probably won’t have time in one class period for every student to experience every different role, assure them that eventually they will all have numerous chances to discuss in the middle, be an observer, and take notes.  NOTE: Plan ahead!  Having a well-organized grade-recording system will make your life easier.

TIPS FOR INTRODUCING SOCRATIC SEMINARS:

  • Make a big deal about how important Socratic Seminars are for the skills they teach.  College students participate in seminars, and this practice—both the discussions and the note-taking (a skill college students MUST HAVE but many struggle with)—will help them in the future.
  • Don’t rush into the discussions without establishing your expectations for each role.  Explain the logistics fully and patiently.  Take as much time as you need to clarify terms on the rubric, observation checklist, and guided notes organizer.  Describe what a solid performance looks (and, of course, sounds) like, and be sure to emphasize that this is a group DISCUSSION, not just four people delivering monologues.  How they respond to one another will affect their grade.  Remind them to use strong vocabulary and academic language (or “accountable talk” or “habits of discussion,” or whatever you call it), and point to any helpful posters for reference.  Also, stress the importance of proper volume.
  • Customize the discussion questions and guided notes organizers as needed, but the rubric and observation checklist can stay the same.  It is generally best if different groups do not discuss exactly the same material (because the discussions can become repetitious and boring), but if they must, they should address it from different angles.  For example, if you want five groups to discuss Elie Wiesel’s Night,[1] give each group a different chapter or set of questions to tackle.
  • Make sure note-takers are clear about what good notes look like. They did not emerge from the womb knowing how to take notes.  Show them models.  Teach them shortcuts and common abbreviations.
  • The observers’ job is to provide positive feedback.  At least initially, it’s best to limit observers’ comments in the post-Seminar debrief discussion to “what the person I observed did WELL.”  After each participant has received some positive strokes, you can offer “things to work on for next time.”  Later on, after you’ve trained students in effective CONSTRUCTIVE feedback, then you can encourage that form of response.
  • To ease students’ nerves the first time around, make the first time a “dry run” for credit and feedback, not a major grade.  While some students relish having an audience, others would rather flee the country.  To accustom them to this potentially unsettling new ground, you might want to start with shorter sessions (say, six minutes) and questions on familiar topics—for example, how they feel about various holidays or which movies they like the best.  You might also use this opportunity to prompt personal reflection, such as with the following questions: 1) What are your high school and college plans? 2) What do you think your biggest challenges will be? 3) How do you expect to deal with these challenges?  Once they’ve gained their footing, you can shift their attention to more academic topics and texts.  The bottom line is this: If you can make everyone as comfortable as possible when launching this challenging task, it could become an invaluable tool in your classroom.  Indeed, in one class where I coached the co-teachers, their students began to REQUEST Socratic Seminars as a way to process what they were learning.
  • Keep in mind that in order to conduct effective discussions about texts, students must read and analyze texts effectively.  Check out the TLC “Analyzing Literature” page for more information on how to teach students how to annotate and analyze texts.
  • Here again are the key documents you’ll need in order to run Socratic Seminars.  They can be downloaded for FREE from the TLC “Socratic Seminars” page:
  •      Socratic Seminar Observation Checklist
  •      Socratic Seminar Questions on Persuasive Texts
  •      Socratic Seminar Questions on Short Stories
  •      Socratic Seminar Rubric
  •      Book Talk Project for Class Novel
  •      Habits of Discussion 1-pager

*This entry is adapted from a chapter in The Literacy Cookbook, which can be ordered HERE.


[1] Wiesel, E. (2006).  Night.  (M. Wiesel, trans.) New York, NY: Hill and Wang. (Originally published 1958.)

About theliteracycookbook

In addition to this blog, I am the creator of THE LITERACY COOKBOOK Website (www.literacycookbook.com) and ONLY GOOD BOOKS Blog (http://onlygoodbooks.wordpress.com/), and the author of THE LITERACY COOKBOOK: A Practical Guide to Effective Reading, Writing, Speaking, and Listening Instruction (Jossey-Bass, 2012), LITERACY AND THE COMMON CORE: Recipes for Action (Jossey-Bass, 2014), USING GRAMMAR TO IMPROVE WRITING: Recipes for Action (BookBaby, 2018), and HIT THE DRUM: An Insider's Account of How the Charter School Idea Became a National Movement (BookBaby, 2019). Check out my Website for more information about my consulting work.
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2 Responses to SOCRATIC SEMINARS MADE EASY*

  1. Angela Germano says:

    Love this thank you

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