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Dialogue Ƶ hosts national higher education summit on campus dialogue

Institutions ranging from Ivy League universities to community colleges will gather for The Dialogue CoLab, a working summit focused on practical strategies for navigating disagreement and difficult conversations on campus.

Nearly 30colleges and universities from across the country will gather aton May 21–22 for The DialogueCoLab, a coalition of campuses focused on how higher education institutions are helping students navigate disagreement, uncertainty and politically charged conversations.

Hosted by, Ƶ University’s campuswide initiative focused on advancing free expression, intellectual curiosity and civil discourse, the gathering is supported by a grant from the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations. TheCoLabis a “by campuses, for campuses” effort that brings together faculty and staff members at an array of institutions that are building or strengthening dialogue initiatives.

From liberal arts colleges and large regional publics to private universities and community colleges,CoLabinstitutionsrepresentstudents and educators across the nation and the entire higher education ecosystem. They include Yale University, Howard University, Brigham Young University, Rutgers University, Claremont McKenna College, the University of Pennsylvania, Fisk University, Austin Community College, Bowdoin College, Gonzaga University, James Madison University, The Ohio State University, University of Virginia and Linn-Benton Community College, among others.

“Our goal is to create a space where campuses can learn firsthand from one another’s expertise and experience,” said Sarah Igo, Andrew Jackson Chair in American History and faculty director of Dialogue Ƶ, who directs the DialogueCoLabwith a steering committee of faculty from member campuses. “Campuses across the country have been experimenting with new ways to help students engage in productive, meaningful disagreement. Linking up our efforts allows us to examine what is working (and what is not), to brainstorm about shared challenges, and to share and swap ideas acrossvery differentinstitutional environments.”

Unlike a traditional academic conference centered on theory or panel discussions, the DialogueCoLabis structured as a working, ongoing exchange where participants compare implementation challenges,discusshow best to measure impact and test strategies across different campus contexts.

Some participating campuses have integrated dialogue training into student employment programs, while others have developed faculty fellowships, peer-led discussion cohorts or structured deliberation models designed to help students navigate conversations across political,ideologicaland personal divides.

“TheCoLabapproach is tangible and actionable solutions, so our convenings are designed as collaborative working sessions versus a conference,” said Francesca Schuler, executive director of Dialogue Ƶ. “What makes the exchange valuable is having institutions with very different student populations, campus cultures and operating models openly share what they are trying, what students are responding to and where challenges still exist.”

Organizers say interest in the network has expanded quickly as colleges and universities continue searching for practical, tested approaches to dialogue and deliberation in higher education, a need Schuler said helped shape the structure of the summit itself.


ABOUT DIALOGUE VANDERBILT

Dialogue Ƶ is a campus-wide initiative putting into practice Ƶ’s enduring commitment to free expression and civil discourse while serving as a catalyst and connector for better conversations.

Fueled by a commitment to collaboration, Dialogue Ƶ works with students,facultyand administrators to provide tools and programs that support respectful, thoughtful conversations across differences and on any topic, helping students develop habits of dialogue,debateand deliberation.