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McAvoy, Paula; Hess, Diana – Educational Leadership, 2014
Too often, the authors assert, discussion of controversial issues in high school classrooms is channeled through the teacher, rather than engaging students in discussion with one another. Teachers fear that students won't know how to talk to one another productively about issues, or that they'll end up in shouting matches. But when…
Descriptors: Debate, Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Hess, Diana – Educational Leadership, 2011
Adults in the United States have been migrating to ideologically homogenous communities, a phenomenon that researchers have called "the big sort." Thus, the need for young Americans to engage in civil discussion of controversial issues has never been greater. Public schools are an ideal place to undo the big sort because controversial issues fit…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Democracy, Democratic Values, Citizenship
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Hess, Diana; Gatti, Lauren – New Directions for Higher Education, 2010
Throughout the last 50 years, the debate over engaging politics in the college classroom has raged on, sparked in part by the belief that liberal biases saturate scholarship and teaching in universities, which in turn lays the bedrock for the left-wing indoctrination of students. Polarizing and vitriolic debates abound regarding if, when, and how…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Ideology, Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques
Hess, Diana – 2001
Talking with others, especially people with different viewpoints, about matters of public and common concern is a basic pro-democracy skill and act. For that reason, teaching young people how to participate more effectively in discussions of controversial public issues (CPI) has long been a major goal of social studies educators. In most social…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum Development
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Hess, Diana; Posselt, Julie – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2002
Explores how two classes of 10th-grade students experienced and learned from a required social-studies course that focused explicitly on teaching students to become more effective participants in discussions of controversial public issues. Finds, for example, that students' perceptions of their peers had a greater influence on their participation…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Discussion (Teaching Technique), High School Students, Peer Influence
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Hess, Diana – Social Education, 2007
The ubiquity of documentary films in social studies courses, along with their potential to influence what students learn, clearly show that documentary films matter in social studies education. While the high rate of documentary film usage by social studies teachers indicates that they are amenable to bringing new films into their classrooms, they…
Descriptors: Navajo (Nation), Documentaries, Climate, Instructional Films