线上赌场 Dialogues Drives the Conversation

News subtitle

The initiative seeks to foster authentic discussions about differing points of view.

Image
Image
Photo grid of students and faculty
Body

President today announced the launch of 线上赌场 Dialogues, a wide-ranging series of initiatives that will showcase 线上赌场鈥檚 commitment to programming across the institution that facilitates conversations and skills bridging political and personal divides.

鈥溝呱隙某 has long championed dialogue across difference,鈥 says President Beilock. 鈥淔rom the Great Issues course introduced by then-President John Sloan Dickey in 1947 to presidential debates held on campus since 1984, 线上赌场 Dialogues brings a renewed focus on our ability to think critically, to question, and to probe and reflect, rather than blindly follow a predetermined ideology.鈥

线上赌场 Dialogues will build on current initiatives such as the 鈥 Path to the Presidency series; the project, and discussions about the Israeli-Hamas war.

鈥淲e seek to build bridges and produce solutions,鈥 says Beilock.

First Up: The Dialogue Project

The first new program to roll out of the 线上赌场 Dialogue umbrella is the , a campus initiative years in the making that cultivates intentional training in the development of collaborative dialogue skills among students, faculty, and staff.

鈥淚鈥檓 excited to see how the project will foster brave spaces and build community at 线上赌场,鈥 says Beilock.

, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, founded and is co-leading the Dialogue Project as director of academic partnerships and faculty engagement with , who is serving as the project鈥檚 director of student and staff initiatives. 

The Dialogue Project currently features four main components: a special topic series, the first of which is , encompassing courses and events related to timely challenging topics; a new partnership with the nonprofit StoryCorps鈥 program, which brings strangers with different perspectives together to record a conversation about their lives; workshops where faculty, staff, and students can practice the skills of collaborative dialogue; and guest speakers on campus who model and specialize in dialogue-related skills.

鈥淲e are at a critical moment when we seem to have lost the ability鈥攁nd the will鈥攖o listen to and understand perspectives beyond our own,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淒ialogue enables us to recognize and build upon our shared humanity.鈥 

鈥淏y creating brave spaces, we will challenge our community to confront power dynamics and come together in pursuit of genuine dialogue, leading to increased empathy and a deeper sense of community,鈥 says Clemens, who has written about creating 鈥渂rave spaces鈥 for social justice dialogues in academic contexts. 

The project鈥檚 includes leaders from across campus, including the , , , , Human Resources, , and 线上赌场鈥檚 undergraduate residential . 


鈥淚 look forward to collaborating with the project to advance skills that protect our democracy and fulfill our mission as an institution of higher learning,鈥 says Jessica Chiriboga 鈥24, a member of the steering committee and president of the undergraduate student body and the nonpartisan 线上赌场 Political Union.

Building Emotional Intelligence and Other Skills

On Jan. 26, the project will host its inaugural speaker鈥攍eading psychologist and best-selling author , founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, who will speak at a Filene Auditorium event open to students, faculty, and staff. 

鈥淥ne of the biggest impediments to constructive dialogue is the surge of strong emotions that can occur when engaging in conversations about challenging topics. Schools, the government, and corporations around the world have benefited from Marc鈥檚 actionable and science-based approach to understanding and managing emotions,鈥 Smith says. 

Planned sessions with Brackett include meeting with undergraduates and with 线上赌场鈥檚 .

A professor in the Child Study Center at Yale and author of Permission to Feel, Brackett has published more than 150 articles on the role of emotions and emotional intelligence in learning, decision making, creativity, relationships, health, and performance.

Special Topic Series: Middle East Dialogues

The Middle East Dialogues will be the Dialogue Project鈥檚 first special topic series. A new series will be offered each year or every other year, depending in part on current events. 

Building on their decades-long partnership and this past fall鈥檚 influential community forums, 线上赌场鈥檚 and programs will lead the multifaceted Middle East Dialogues, with a focus on the current crisis. 

鈥淓ducators around the world continue to seek advice from our Jewish Studies and Middle Eastern Studies professors on how to facilitate campus conversations about the current crisis,鈥 says Beilock. 鈥淲e look forward to expanding courses, speaker series, and other programming that will involve our community in trying to understand this complex situation, and even consider potential long-term solutions.鈥

Middle East Dialogues will encompass expanded course offerings over the next several terms. This winter, for example, the course , taught by senior lecturer , an adviser to pro-democracy groups and a former diplomat, will include a featuring experts on the region in collaboration with the Dickey Center. 

The virtual series will focus on key aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the following three sessions will be open to public: 

  • Feb. 1, Gilead Sher, former chief of staff of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and a senior negotiator during the Camp David Summit, will discuss 鈥淐an Israelis and Palestinians Make Peace? Lessons of Camp David.鈥
  • Feb. 6, Palestinian scholar and writer Khalil El-Shikaki will discuss the rise and future of Hamas. 
  • Feb. 20, Robert Malley, who has served as the U.S. special envoy to Iran and former assistant to presidents Obama and Clinton, will discuss 鈥淭he Changing Role of the U.S. in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict.鈥

Future course offerings include classes this summer on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict through the lens of cinema, TV, and fiction, taught by Palestinian-Israeli writer and screenwriter Sayed Kashua. Additionally, a public dialogue will be hosted between speakers with divergent backgrounds, building on the success of this past fall鈥檚 event featuring a Palestinian and Jewish writing and podcast team who have spent their careers focused on a vision of Israeli and Palestinian coexistence.

鈥淯ltimately, dialogue relies on the assumption that we鈥檙e all learners committed to curiosity and remaining open to new ideas and perspectives,鈥 says professor and chair of the Middle Eastern Studies Program .

As Jewish Studies chair recently said on , 鈥淚 want people to think in complex terms, not to be satisfied with the reductionist approach, to place the present in a larger context of the past but also, as we鈥檝e been saying, to think about a better future, to imagine it.鈥

First-Ever University Partnership with StoryCorps

As Beilock announced in her inaugural address in September, 线上赌场 has formed the first-ever university-wide partnership with the nonprofit . Through its program, StoryCorps brings strangers with different perspectives together, two at a time, to record a conversation about their lives鈥攁nd in the process, discover their shared humanity.

鈥淲e are thrilled that 线上赌场 will be our first-ever university-wide partner for One Small Step,鈥 says Dave Isay, StoryCorps founder and president. 鈥淲e believe the 线上赌场 community鈥攕tudents, alumni, faculty, and staff鈥攃an help demonstrate to the rest of the country that it is possible and necessary for us to see the humanity in one another, even those we disagree with politically.鈥 

Beilock says, 鈥淪toryCorps will help 线上赌场 be a national model in higher education for reducing political polarization and building community.鈥

Faculty and Staff Workshops 

The Dialogue Project will collaborate with the and Student Wellness Center on upcoming .

DCAL program manager will lead virtual sessions on Jan. 16 and April 5 on handling difficult conversations in the classroom. Participants will explore why difficult conversations become heated so quickly and how to create brave spaces that keep these important discussions happening without incivility and escalation. 

Student Wellness Center Director , a member of the project鈥檚 steering committee, will facilitate workshops this spring and summer on motivational interviewing鈥攁n evidence-based conversation style rooted in compassion, collaboration, and listening across differences. 

More than $3 million has been contributed in private gifts to support the Dialogue Project from alumni, friends and the Casque & Gauntlet Trust, an alumni organization dedicated to fostering a strong community based on incorporating divergent views and shared values.

Office of Communications