Lesson: The Power of Active Listening
Facilitate a short discussion using the following prompts:
- What happened to the original message?
- Was it easy or difficult to hear the message? Why do you think it might have been difficult?
Responses might include the following:
- “It was hard to hear because the person was whispering.”
- “We weren’t making eye contact.”
- “Students were talking or laughing.”
- “It’s hard to understand an isolated word or phrase without any context; i.e., without context, words and phrases can sound like they come from out of the blue.”
Activity: Celeste Davis & Aaron
12 Minutes
- Explain that today students will explore the power of listening to others, as well as being listened to ourselves.
- Explain to students that they are going to begin this exploration by hearing an audio clip of a StoryCorps teacher Celeste Davis-Carr, and her student, Aaron. Aaron shared with his teacher, Celeste, in a StoryCorps recording that he was homeless. This was their follow-up interview.
- Play the Celeste Davis-Carr & Aaron Audio Clip for students. You can also access the interview transcript.
Link to story
Embed story
- Why do you think that it was powerful for Celeste to listen to Aaron and his story?
- How did Celeste show Aaron that she was really listening to him?
- Why do you think that it was important to Aaron that his teacher, Celeste, listened to him and his story? How do you know?
Activity: What is Active Listening?
- Explain to students that Celeste and Aaron’s conversation demonstrated not just listening, but active listening.
- Pass out printed copies of the Active Listening Student Handout , or project the definition below for the entire class using available technology.
- Ask a student to read the definition of active listening out loud for the class:
Active listening involves attentively seeking to understand a speaker’s message, rather than passively hearing the words that a speaker says.
Active Listeners provide verbal and nonverbal feedback to show their sincere investment in what the speaker is sharing.
Active listening can help to build trust within a conversation, thereby allowing the speaker to communicate more easily, openly and honestly.
Debrief
Facilitate a short discussion using the following prompts:
- Why is listening to others powerful for us personally?
- Why is being listened to powerful for us personally?
- Why is listening to others difficult sometimes?
- What are some things we can do to make others feel like we’re really listening to them?
Optional Activity: Tips for Active Listening
Eight Minutes
- Explain to students that it is important for them to have an understanding of what active listening looks like concretely.
- Tell students that they are going to learn more about active listening through the Tips for Active Listening video.
- Play the Tips for Active Listening video for students. You can also view the video transcript.
- Which of these tips are nonverbal strategies?
- Which of these tips are verbal strategies?
- What are examples of other tips for active listening?
Activity: Short Silences Listening Lab
Nine Minutes
- Tell students that they are now going to try an exercise to practice active listening strategies, particularly using short silences and not interrupting.
- Ask students to read the quote by Diana Senechal, an author and former New York City public school teacher, which is listed on the Active Listening Student Handout . You can also choose to project the definition below for the entire class using available technology.
“Listening…involves a certain surrender, a willingness to sit with what one does not already know…Listening requires us to stretch a little beyond what we know, expect or want.” —Diana Senechal
- “To understand someone who is different from us, we need to try to see things from his or her perspective”
- “We have to put aside what we think we know to really listen.”
Debrief
Facilitate a discussion of the interviews using the following questions:
- As the interviewer, how did it feel to pause before asking questions?
- Were the pauses helpful when you were telling your story?
- Did this listening exercise differ from the other peer interviews we have done in class? If so, how?
- Do you think people often use this method of ‘short silences’ in real life?
- What does it feel like when someone interrupts you?
- What do you think might cause someone to interrupt another person?
Closing: Hands Up If…
Four Minutes
Explain to students that the listening exercise they just performed was also used by graduate students, i.e., people who have graduated from college and are studying for a master’s degree. Read the following statement, written by one of those students:
This listening exercise … help[ed] me to realize that interrupting is not only cutting in and talking when someone else is speaking. … Interrupting someone can go so far as to not let someone fully explore and express the depths of their thoughts, even when it seems they have finished speaking.
Printable Lesson Materials
Title | Link |
Lesson Plan: The Power of Active Listening | Download Printable PDF |
Common Core Standards | Download Printable PDF |
Active Listening Student Handout List | Download Printable PDF |
Transcript of Celeste Davis-Carr & Aaron Carr Interview | Download Printable PDF |
Transcript for Tips for Active Listening video | Download Printable PDF |