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About
the Discussion
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A booklet on discussions may
seem a little like telling someone to try to laugh; the natural
suddenly becomes very unnatural.
It becomes forced and contrived.
But we'd like you to try a simple experiment. Listen. Simply listen.
The next time you are with a few people engaged in conversation
about some specific topic, just step away from it inwardly.
Don't participate, just quietly listen to the words and thoughts
bounce back and forth like pingpong balls.
- Did people ask each other questions?
- Did they seriously weigh the other person's opinions?
- Did they speak directly and clearly or in vague generalities
which really didn't say much that was new?
- What were they interested in? Learning? Sharing? Convincing?
Defending? Bragging?
If you observe closely and long enough, we think you'll find
that although human beings talk a lot, we often don't do it very
well. We talk at each other rather than to each other. We are
sometimes like flat walls that meet each other head on, and just
push, push, push…
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A discussion, if it is about
anything reasonably serious and important to the participants, involves
the patterns of thinking and
personalities, the language, the emotions and eccentricities, of
several unique individuals. There's a lot of unharnessed power there,
a lot of wildly shooting sparks.
Your job as a discussion leader is to harness that energy, to
keep those sparks flying and to focus them into a flame. It's
not easy. It requires much patience and practice, the development
of sensitivity and awareness.
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There are always questions that you as the leader need to ask
yourself.
- Just how much should you lead?
- Are there certain conclusions you want your group to arrive
at?
- If so, can you and should you lead them to that conclusion?
- And if they arrive independently at another conclusion, how
do you as the leader respond?
- Do you need to know the members' personalities and backgrounds
in order to deal with them, or should they be related to solely
on the basis of what emerges from the discussion?
- How do you respond if someone says something you find especially
repulsive? (e.g.: "Hitler has been maligned by history." "I
think dissident Arabs should be shot.")
You need a clear sense of what you are trying to
accomplish in your discussion group and how you will do it.
You need to be ready to handle unexpected situations,
to react to challenges when you know everyone is staring at you
and wondering how you will react.
You need to know the material and have your own
excitement to communicate to your group members. If you don't
have it they won't pick it up: Nothing makes for a boring discussion
like a boring initiator. On the other hand, nothing makes for
a successful, exciting discussion like a leader who is enthusiastic
about the material, concerned with the participants, and himself
eager to learn from the experience. The enthusiasm of the leader
cannot take the place of good concrete techniques, but the techniques
are hollow motions without that underlying interest and concern.
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An Essential
Tool
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Nothing can replace a good, solid discussion. It is, like reading
and writing, an essential tool within society. Yet, as technological
progress creates mass communication at the global level, we as
individuals become even less equipped to share open conversation
with each other. If anything, it seems that we are slowly becoming
crippled in the use of the basic tool of discussion, just as our
reading and writing skills are deteriorating.
Your teaching of one group how to engage in civil, decent and
productive human discussion, and maybe even to learn about other
individuals from it, may not change the world. But don't belittle
your own role. It is no small accomplishment to engage a group
of young people in discussion which is intelligent, provocative,
and based on mutual respect and learning.
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Characteristics
of the Discussion
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There are, as we shall see, different forms
a discussion can take. But whatever the form, a well-run discussion
will have certain characteristics. It will help its participants
to:
- Think and express themselves clearly;
- Learn how to listen to others without imposing
their own judgment or turning the conversation back to their
own opinions;
- Acquire some new piece of knowledge;
- practice democratic procedure;
- Learn a little more about a person they
did not know;
- Learn how to question facts.
The discussion may even help someone to re-examine
old views, open him or her up to new thinking, and show someone
that changing one's mind is not a sign of inferiority, but rather
can be a sign of maturity.
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