Equipped with a speaking token that ensures everyone in the group gets a turn, the students discuss a question.
The method trains students to take turns in a group conversation and to listen while others are speaking.
Hand out a ‘talking chips’—e.g., a pencil or a centicube—to each student. The students sit in groups around their own tables.
Ask a challenging or thought-provoking question that invites students to take a position. For example: Should politicians place limits on how much clothing a person can buy? Is it more climate-friendly to buy second-hand clothes? Give the students some thinking time.
The student who wants to speak places talking chip in the middle of the table and starts the conversation. The next student in the group who wants to speak places their chip and makes their contribution.
The conversation continues until everyone has placed their chip and said something.
The students take back their chip, and the process can continue from step 2 until there is nothing more to say or the time is up.
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