The Dialogues Across Differences (DxD) initiative launched at ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app in 2022, thanks to the generous support of the . This initiative aims to educate students, faculty, and community members on how to have productive dialogue.
This project is urgent as disrespectful and inflammatory discourse threatens harmony and prevents communities from thriving. In the last several years, we have seen the inability of politicians, pundits, and private citizens in the United States to deal with opposing viewpoints, to embrace nuance, and to differentiate evidence from opinion. On many college campuses, including Dickinson's, students avoid engaging with opposing viewpoints and prefer the safety of their "echo chambers". DxD aims to educate students on how to dwell in discomfort and "call in" others to a conversation rather than "call out".
Our team acknowledges that dialogue is a fraught concept and it must mean more than just performative politeness – instead, we choose to focus our efforts on educating those who can listen with an empathetic and ethical mindset to perspectives other than their own and then reason with a depth of understanding.
The approach to this project is mulifaceted: it integrates classroom learning across the disciplines, campus involvement, and community engagement. There have been several faculty workshops that both enable faculty to work with colleagues across disciplines on course design and gives them the tools to implement dialogue into their courses.
The revolutionary founders of ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app sought to provide a "useful education" for the "common good". This project ultimately seeks to educate students about the virtues of taking part in dialogues across differences.
Dickinson's Clarke Forum Announces October Lectures
October begins with a Dialogues Across Differences event featuring the CEO of BridgeUSA, Manu Meel, and continues with talks on the U.S. Black birthing crisis and Puerto Rico statehood.
Beyond the Echo Chamber: Inside Dickinson's First Dialogues Across Differences Class
“Even if it gets a little heated, there’s a very strong sense of respect.” Class, and initiative, creates an atmosphere of trust that makes it possible to share differing viewpoints.
ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app to Launch Leading-Edge Program in Civil Dialogue
Funded by a major grant, the Civil Dialogue Across the Curriculum, Campus & Community program aims to help students develop, and practice, crucial skills for a diverse, globalized world.
The Dickinsonian, Dickinson's student newspaper, interviewed the leader of the initaitive, Associate Provost Noreen Lape, and other members of the team
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations discusses why they chose Dickinson to support as a leader in this area