Students create the questions and activities, as well as artifacts. Artifacts are concrete, so they are able to be shared/discussed, as well as critiqued.
Activities are designed to help students learn new information without having a driving question.
Projects connect in class learning with real-life experiences.
The teacher acts as a model, guide, and facilitator. Teachers also have different means of assessments, varying upon the students. They also compare their assessment with the students’ self-assessment.
Higher level thinking can be reached when students are pushed to ask questions and think critically about topics, and discussing with others/trying to persuade them, reinforces their learning.
The leader takes on a large role in Socratic Dialogue.
The leader (teacher or students) should keep conversations focused on the topic at hand, allow all students an equal time for speaking, all participants should clarify and elaborate. The leader should continuously clarify, synthesize, and restate previously stated opinions.