This practical guide helps teachers and students to foster a learning environment where even the most difficult and divisive issues can be discussed. Examples incorporate the voices and experiences of student. REVIEWS "Given the turmoil on current college campuses, the classroom may seem an unlikely place for healing political polarization. Amy Uelmen and Michael Kessler clear away the sound bites and culture-war posturing to reveal the transformative potential of the mutual vulnerability that the best teaching brings forward. This book is not wishful academic thinking - it's a road map shaped by their real-world experience. Uelmen and Kessler show the vital importance of higher education-- not as a tool for mere job training, but for equipping both faculty and students to push back against what Pope Francis calls the 'culture of indifference.' This book is an invaluable teacher's manual for helping students become skilled professionals who know how to practice dialogue in their academic, economic, and personal lives."
Robert K. Vischer
Dean and Mengler Chair in Law
University of St. Thomas School of Law
Russell Johnson
PhD candidate at the University of Chicago Divinity School
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