9 Ways to Hold Thoughtful Discussions

By Robyn Ross

Is civil dialogue possible in the face of diametrically opposing views? Hilltoppers share the tools they use to engage in challenging conversations amid differing perspectives.

 

1. Diversify Your Sources.

Diversify your sources of information and whom you follow on social media. Think twice before following accounts that are designed to stoke outrage 鈥 ones that share attention-grabbing headlines or inflammatory video clips but offer little context.

 

2. Get Off Social Media Altogether

Focus on making more time for face-to-face conversations.

 

3. Pause for 60 Seconds

When you鈥檙e in a tense conversation, in person or online, take a deep breath before you respond. In conversations about especially charged topics, Different Together facilitators pause for 60 seconds of silence after each speaker to let others process what they鈥檝e heard.

 

4. Spend Time Thinking about Your Values

Particularly for long-term dialogues 鈥 such as with a friend or family member 鈥 spend some time thinking about your own values before you engage the other person. What life experiences have shaped your views? How did you come to hold the beliefs you hold today?

 

5. Talk to Strangers First

Practice having conversations with strangers before you try talking politics with Uncle Jake at Thanksgiving. Look for events hosted by groups similar to Different Together 鈥 try Braver Angels and the BetterArguments Project.

 

6. Practice Active Listening

鈥淵ou need to set aside your own biases when you鈥檙e listening to another perspective, and you need to actually absorb what  the person is saying in order to give a constructive response,鈥 Emma Viquez '23 says.

 

7. Check Your Assumptions

Everyone makes snap judgments based on the hidden biases we hold. Ask yourself about the assumptions you鈥檙e making about the person you鈥檙e talking with or the group you鈥檙e learning about. What are they based on? Can you verify whether they鈥檙e accurate?

 

8. You're Not Required to Engage

Remember that you鈥檙e not required to engage with Uncle Jake 鈥 or anyone who is being disrespectful or insulting. 鈥淪how grace,鈥 Chris Collins '04 says. 鈥淏ut if you extend grace to somebody, and that person doesn鈥檛 return it, then they have just isolated themselves from a meaningful connection. That鈥檚 the choice they have made.鈥

 

9. Have Compassion for Yourself

Have compassion for yourself as well as the other person. 鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 judge yourself as harshly, you can be open to not judging others harshly,鈥 says Walter C. Long '14. 鈥淵ou can step into their shoes and try to experience things the way they do.鈥


Illustrations by Brian Stauffer

An illustration of two people holding spheres with rings shooting upwards

Bridging the Divide: Hilltopper Stories

In an era of record political polarization, it鈥檚 hard to have a constructive conversation with a person who holds different views. St. Edward鈥檚 is breaking the impasse by building graduates鈥 ability to hold peaceful, respectful conversations with those who disagree.

In Bridging the Divide, we spotlight five members of the university community who are helping Americans replace toxic conflict with constructive disagreement.