{"title":"Confronting a Source of Contemporary Student Disengagement","authors":"David A. Gerber","doi":"10.33823/phtc.v1i1.173","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The author teaches undergraduate seminars on problems of justice arising historically from the freedom of expression clause of the US Constitution’s First Amendment. He began this instruction before the present fraught intellectual climate, with its ideological polarization and its claims, Left and Right, against the traditional arguments for tolerance for opinions different from one’s own. He has long favored confronting what Ken Bain, the author of What the Best College Teachers Do, has called “the big questions,” and in these seminars asks: is it possible for a democratic society to achieve simultaneously the desirable ends of justice and order? Recently he has taught students with strong responses to big questions. The campus is often characterized by vigorous expression of the progressive student consensus but quiescence on the part of the not inconsiderable number of conservative students and students less secure in their opinions. This seminar has maintained proactive conversations, with generally broad participation. In this article, he explains how, through structured discussions, simulations, and the study of judicial processes, historical lawsuits and court decisions have provided frameworks for classes that are explicitly less divisive and more productive of analytical thinking. The article concludes, however, with a discussion of an abiding problem within this generally successful model: the disengaged student whose opinions lie outside the abidingly liberal-progressive campus consensus and who seeks to avoid participation.","PeriodicalId":422713,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the H-Net Teaching Conference","volume":"74 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Proceedings of the H-Net Teaching Conference","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.33823/phtc.v1i1.173","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The author teaches undergraduate seminars on problems of justice arising historically from the freedom of expression clause of the US Constitution’s First Amendment. He began this instruction before the present fraught intellectual climate, with its ideological polarization and its claims, Left and Right, against the traditional arguments for tolerance for opinions different from one’s own. He has long favored confronting what Ken Bain, the author of What the Best College Teachers Do, has called “the big questions,” and in these seminars asks: is it possible for a democratic society to achieve simultaneously the desirable ends of justice and order? Recently he has taught students with strong responses to big questions. The campus is often characterized by vigorous expression of the progressive student consensus but quiescence on the part of the not inconsiderable number of conservative students and students less secure in their opinions. This seminar has maintained proactive conversations, with generally broad participation. In this article, he explains how, through structured discussions, simulations, and the study of judicial processes, historical lawsuits and court decisions have provided frameworks for classes that are explicitly less divisive and more productive of analytical thinking. The article concludes, however, with a discussion of an abiding problem within this generally successful model: the disengaged student whose opinions lie outside the abidingly liberal-progressive campus consensus and who seeks to avoid participation.
作者在本科生研讨会上讲授美国宪法第一修正案中言论自由条款在历史上引发的司法问题。他是在当前充满忧患的知识分子氛围——意识形态两极化和主张左右对立、反对容忍与自己不同观点的传统论点——之前开始这一教导的。长期以来,他一直倾向于面对《最好的大学教师做什么》(what the Best College Teachers Do)一书的作者肯·贝恩(Ken Bain)所说的“大问题”,并在这些研讨会上提出这样的问题:一个民主社会是否有可能同时实现正义和秩序的理想目标?最近,他教的学生对重大问题有强烈的反应。校园里的特点往往是,进步的学生积极地表达自己的观点,而为数不少的保守的学生和对自己的观点不那么自信的学生则保持沉默。这次研讨会保持了积极的对话,参与普遍广泛。在这篇文章中,他解释了如何通过结构化的讨论、模拟和对司法程序的研究,历史诉讼和法院判决为班级提供了明确减少分歧、提高分析思维效率的框架。然而,文章最后讨论了这个普遍成功的模式中一个持久存在的问题:那些不参与的学生,他们的观点游离于持久的自由进步的校园共识之外,他们试图避免参与。