
Classroom Heat
By Scott Jaschik
August 16, 2005
Some scenarios:
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In your Sociology of Families course, you ask students to write a paper
on the arguments for and against gay adoption. One of your students tells
you that he cannot do this assignment because offering arguments for gay
adoption clashes with his religious beliefs.
-
In your Race and Ethnicity course, a students cites “evidence” that
African Americans are intellectually inferior to whites. When challenged,
she points to the syllabus, which states, “Each person’s perspective is
valuable.”
-
A student whose opinion differs from the majority of the class speaks her
mind. She is personally attacked by another student and before you can
intervene, the attacked student runs out of the classroom. Do you run after
her?
Hot button issues may not come up regularly in classroom discussion in
every discipline. But in sociology, they come up all the time. Abortion. Gay
marriage. Poverty. Religion. Even issues that may not capture headlines all
the time — like spanking — are regularly covered (and fought over) by
sociology students.
At a session of the annual meeting of the American Sociological
Association, which is going on this week in Philadelphia, professors tried to
talk through strategies for how to discuss these issues — without losing
control of their classrooms, hurting students’ feelings, or ending up being
lampooned on David Horowitz’s Web site. The above scenarios (which audience
members said were close to things they had experienced) were analyzed and
debated.
“A lot of people try to avoid controversy in the classroom for all kinds of
reasons,” said Tamara Smith, a Ph.D. candidate at the State University of New
York at Albany who has taught sociology at numerous colleges. “But
controversial issues are relevant to the discipline and to students’
lives.”
Smith and others who spoke at the session said that there was no way
sociologists could avoid these topics. But the speakers and audience members
had all kinds of views on whether various strategies were effective or not.
Judging from comments in the room, the professors who gathered for the
discussion were all on the “liberal” side of the hot button topics. But
professor after professor spoke with concern about making students who
disagree feel comfortable expressing their opinions.
Horowitz, the radical-turned-conservative who has urged state legislatures
and Congress to enact legislation to fight what he calls ideological
manipulation in classrooms, was for much of the discussion the elephant in the
room that no one was talking about. He wasn’t mentioned in the presentations,
but when he came up in the Q&A, it was clear that many sociologists do
worry that their classrooms are particularly vulnerable to attacks by
conservative groups.
But what was striking was that the professors (only a few of whom were
aware that a reporter was in the room) spoke with passion about how they had
been grappling with these issues for years — well before Horowitz started to
push his legislation.
Among the teaching issues discussed at the session were whether professors
should to be up front about their views. Some speakers argued for doing so
from the start, in the spirit of honesty; others worried about making those
who disagree feel that they can’t speak out, and still others said holding
back the information can be “a distraction” as students pester to find out and
try to analyze which side their instructor is on.
A number of professors put statements on the syllabus, specifically
encouraging students to share a variety of views, but to avoid personal
attacks. And many use various forms of debates (in which people may end up
arguing for a side they don’t believe in) to teach various concepts.
Heather Sullivan-Catlin, an associate professor at SUNY-Potsdam, said she
likes to give assignments in which students must present arguments for both
sides of an issue, and then assigns them at random to debate the issue in
class. So the students have studied both sides, but don’t know which side they
will be called upon to defend and whether it will reflect their beliefs. “They
learn the issue better if they have to do both sides,” she said. One danger:
“Sometimes the ‘winner’ is the loudest or most eloquent, not the person
presenting the best argument.”
However thoughtful professors are about encouraging civility, several said
that with combustible topics, you can have an explosion and not even realize
why until after the fact.
Jennifer Keys, an assistant professor of sociology at North Central
College, talked about how she teaches a course on the sociology of abortion.
She uses many approaches to try to help students think about the arguments
with which they may disagree. For example, she has students talk about groups
like Feminists for Life and Catholics for Choice, and to consider how people
can identify as feminists or as Roman Catholic and disagree with the views
dominant in those groups.
Or she used “distancing techniques,” such as having her students analyze a
selection of abortion-related bumper stickers. The discussion wasn’t on
whether abortion should be legal, but the effectiveness of arguments that need
to be expressed with the few words that a bumper sticker allows.
Keys said that she has also used polling to get students to think more
about their positions. By showing students that the country is split on an
issue like abortion, they must confront the reality that — whatever their
position — many disagree. In the past, she has sometimes done an anonymous
poll of her students and then had students analyze the differences between
their classroom’s views and those of the public. One year, she found that only
one student opposed legalized abortion and shortly after that, that student
dropped the course.
After tracking down the student, Keys learned that in a small group
discussion that she didn’t hear, another student made a remark to the effect
of “I can’t believe anyone here is pro-life. I just want to strangle
pro-lifers.” Unknown to that student, one of the members of the group was that
pro-lifer, who felt a need to drop the course. Keys said that if the comment
had been made in front of the entire class, she could have intervened, and
pointed out why it was wrong to make such a statement.
“But we need to remember that we don’t know what students say to each
other,” Keys said, and that’s where damage can be done.
In dealing with such situations, most professors talked about a mix of
in-class discussions on acceptable forms of criticism and one-on-one
discussions with students who may be personally attacking others, or who are
being attacked.
Getting Personal
Another challenging issue discussed at the session was how personal to
allow or encourage students to be in discussions. After all, students’ views
on abortion may be shaped by having had one (or by being adopted), and
students’ views may be shaped by having been a crime victim or having a
relative in jail.
Professors in the audience at the sessions shared examples of times when
students’ personal experiences greatly helped a classroom discussion. For
instance, one professor said that in a class on poverty, when a student made
disparaging remarks about people on welfare, a student who stepped forward to
say that he had been on welfare prompted a lot of healthy thought and
discussion. But another professor said that when a student in her class
revealed that he had been institutionalized for a year, other students had a
hard time knowing how to react, and it wasn’t clear that the student realized
the implications of sharing the information.
One professor in the audience said that he worried about introductory
sociology courses becoming “too much therapy, too much Oprah,” and not enough
substance.
Another professor, Derek Greenfield of St. Augustine’s College, in North
Carolina, cited another factor professors should consider when they talk about
topics to which students may have strong emotional reactions. “It’s easy for
us to bring up a topic to illustrate a point, and then to want to move on to
the next topic we want to cover,” Greenfield said. “But these can be very
emotional topics that directly affect students. We’re ready to move on, but
how do we know they are ready to move on?”