Description
The Socratic Seminar is the ultimate demonstration of student mastery in the The Hate U Give unit. This lesson shifts the teacher entirely to the role of observer, as students use their accumulated knowledge to build, fortify, and clarify ideas in a large-group setting. It is designed to bridge the gap between Angie Thomas’s fiction and the lived realities of contemporary society.
Designed for two extended 100-minute blocks, the lesson begins with an intensive preparation phase. Students review their unit notes and draft responses to a curated bank of Socratic questions. The discussion itself utilizes an Inner/Outer Circle format, where “Group A” discusses while “Group B” tracks their partners using a specialized checklist and rubric. This lesson also incorporates modern Chatroom technology (like YoTeach!) to ensure that even students in the outer circle are actively participating and documenting the flow of ideas in real-time.
What’s Included
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Detailed 2-day lesson plan covering preparation, seminar procedures, and post-seminar reflection.
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L8.THUG Socratic – Questions – Checklist – Rubric—a multi-purpose tool for student prep, peer-tracking, and formal assessment.
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L8.Moderators are – Sentence Starters to scaffold the leadership roles of student facilitators.
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Inner/Outer Circle Protocol Guide to manage high-level discourse in large secondary classrooms.
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Digital Integration Guide for using backchannel chatrooms to increase engagement for all learners.
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Self-Assessment Reflection Module to help students process their growth as speakers and critical thinkers.
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Alignment with WAESN Elements of Liberation (Action & Reflection) and CCSS ELA standards for collaborative discussion and evidence-based argumentation.
Why Educators Use This Lesson
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Student-Centered Rigor: Puts the cognitive load on students, requiring them to manage the conversation, cite evidence, and pivot between topics.
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Inclusive Discourse: The combination of oral discussion and digital backchannels ensures that introverted students and English Language Learners have a platform to share their insights.
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Peer Accountability: The partner-tracking system ensures that students are constantly learning from one another’s speaking styles and argumentative strengths.
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Holistic Analysis: Challenges students to connect literary devices (symbolism, mood, tone) directly to systemic social issues.
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Prepares for College/Career: Mimics the style of high-level university seminars and professional collaborative environments.
This is the lesson where your students find their voices and realize the power of their own ideas.







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