
Materials Needed
Space Needed
Chairs arranged in two concentric circles
Explore the core ideas of key Enlightenment thinkers like Locke, Rousseau, Montesquieu, and Voltaire.
Students sit in two concentric circles. The inner circle discusses a provocative question or primary source while the outer circle observes, takes notes, and evaluates the quality of the discussion. Roles rotate so everyone participates. Develops critical thinking, active listening, and evidence-based argumentation.
Learn about this methodologyTime Range
30-60 min
Group Size
12-35
Space Needed
Chairs arranged in two concentric circles
Bloom’s Level
Analyze, Evaluate, Create
Peak Energy Moment
The 'Power Sticky Note' wall creates an immediate visual debate before the teacher even speaks.
The Surprise
The teacher acts as a 'Silent Ghost' during the seminar, only communicating through written notes passed to the students to keep the flow entirely student-led.
What to Expect
Students usually get heated when discussing Robespierre's 'Terror' quote, leading to high-energy debates about whether 'the ends justify the means.'
5 min • Quote
Read Aloud
"Terror is nothing other than justice, prompt, severe, inflexible; it is therefore an emanation of virtue." — Maximilien Robespierre
Teacher Notes
Display this quote as students enter. Ask them to write one word on a sticky note that describes a leader who would say this. Post the notes on the board to visualize the class's initial reaction to radical power.
10 min
Assign students to one of four 'Interest Groups' representing different factions of the Revolution. Hand out the Primary Source Dossiers. Students must read their specific text, underline the author's definition of 'legitimate power,' and prepare two open-ended questions for the seminar. Explain the Socratic Seminar rules: no hand-raising, address peers by name, and back up every claim with a quote from the text.
Group Formation
Divide the class into 4 home groups (7-8 students each) for initial analysis, then move into a large inner/outer fishbowl circle for the seminar.
Materials Needed
30 min • 100% Physical
Text Analysis: Students read their assigned primary source excerpt in their small groups, completing the Prep Worksheet and defining bolded vocabulary terms.
Circulate to ensure students understand the difference between 'divine right' and 'popular sovereignty' in their specific texts.
Seminar Setup: Arrange chairs in two concentric circles. The inner circle (15 students) will discuss first while the outer circle (15 students) tracks their designated partner's participation.
Ensure every student in the inner circle has their annotated text in front of them.
Seminar Round 1: The inner circle discusses the prompt: 'Is violence a legitimate tool for achieving political power?' Use the provided primary sources to argue from their assigned persona's perspective.
Stay outside the circle. Only intervene if the silence lasts longer than 15 seconds.
Switch Roles: The outer circle moves to the inner circle. The previous speakers now become observers and trackers.
Quickly check in with students who were silent in the first round to give them a 'starting' question for the next round.
Seminar Round 2: The new inner circle discusses: 'Who is excluded from your definition of The People, and why does that matter for the Revolution?'
Encourage students to look for contradictions between the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Olympe de Gouges' text.
Closing Statements: Each student writes one sentence on their tracker summarizing the most persuasive argument they heard from an opposing viewpoint.
Collect the trackers as a quick check for active listening.
If things go sideways
Differentiation Tips
5 min
Which faction's argument for power felt most 'modern' to you, and why?
How does the definition of 'the people' change when a group moves from being the oppressed to being the ones in power?
Can a revolution ever be truly successful if it relies on the execution of its opponents?
Exit Ticket
Based on today's texts, write one sentence explaining who you believe deserved power in 1789 France and why.
Connection to Next Lesson
This tension between order and liberty leads directly to our next mission: The Rise of Napoleon and the return to a single ruler.