Schultz, 2010
Schultz, 2010
Schultz, 2010
Silence in Classrooms
KATHERINE SCHULTZ
Mills College
Teachers College Record Volume 112, Number 11, November 2010, pp. 2833–2849
Copyright © by Teachers College, Columbia University
0161-4681
2834 Teachers College Record
careful listening and inquiry shifts a teacher’s practice and changes a teacher’s understand-
ing of students’ participation. I suggest that teachers redefine participation in classrooms to
include silence.
When a teacher listens to silence, she observes the various roles a stu-
dent takes in a classroom, which might include the role of silent observer
and participant. Listening to silence also means attending to the way a
person asserts power by not speaking as well as a contribution made
through spoken words. Teachers can listen to silence through posing a
question rather than rendering a judgment. They can interrogate why a
student is silent, rather than assuming that the silence signals resistance,
lack of interest, disengagement, or incompetence. Listening to silence
can mean holding open the many possible reasons for that silence and
seeing the silence as located in the community interactions rather than
the individual.
I distinguish listening or attending to silence from paying attention to
acts of silencing. Silence is often conceptualized as a condition derived
from the silencing of students through institutional norms, texts, and
interactions. Indeed, there are silencing acts and structures that enforce
silence among certain individuals; silent students are usually thought of
as disempowered by their silence. For instance, students of color, gay or
lesbian students, and students with (dis)abilities are often thought of as
silenced rather than silent by choice. Many people located in these cate-
gories also refuse to take on the silent stance they are assumed to occupy,
their refusal raising questions about how these kinds of categorizations
shape social life. Without dismissing the idea that many students are
silenced in classrooms, I argue that it is important to look beyond silenc-
ing to the silence itself. My exploration focuses on how teachers can lis-
ten to silence in the classroom in order to hear all students and the
meanings conveyed by their silence as well as their talk. In listening to
silence, I suggest that teachers attend to how students might choose
silence rather than how they are victims of silencing moves by teachers
and institutions.
meanings of his silence and the power it represented, teachers might bet-
ter understand his talk and find ways to engage him in schooling.
Luis was not asked by his teacher to explain his silence. Until he spoke
up at the conclusion of this conversation, the power that resided in his
choice to remain silent was not apparent. Rather than simply framing his
participation as disengagement or resistance, I suggest that he was often
both disengaged and engaged in discussions, his pattern of silence and
talk mirroring these choices. At times, he resisted school. Other times,
his statements seemed carefully timed and garnered attention through
their content and through the rhythm of talk and silence they contained.
To some extent, all students display these patterns of engagement and
disengagement; however, some students are labeled “silent” or “resistant”
because they fit into existing categories. These socially constructed cate-
gories obscure the shifting patterns of engagement and disengagement
in daily classroom life.
There are multiple ways to understand Luis’s silence. His silence might
be understood as a powerful move: By surrounding his single comment
with silence, he drew the attention of his classmates and teachers to his
provocative statement. Out of silence came a powerful discourse, disrupt-
ing the stasis that had been established in the class. This example raises
several questions, such as: When do (and should) we interpret silence as
a reflection of social dynamics, and when can (and should) we under-
stand silence as an individual choice about whether to participate in
learning? Further, when do we accept silence as a form of participation,
and when do we push students to speak so that their voices are heard?
How does our attention (and lack of attention) to silence highlight and
even mask the interactional and power dynamics of our classrooms, and
how can we use that silence to prompt conversations about how and
when students choose to participate through both talk and silence?
Middle schools in the United States are filled with boisterous, lanky stu-
dents who engage each other and their teachers in verbal sparring. For
the most part, it is a time of trying out identities, asserting strongly held
opinions, rebelling against adult-imposed rules, forming and breaking
friendships, and, for some students, retreating into silence. Some middle
school teachers have loud classrooms bursting with activity as students
debate their perspectives or work to solve problems. The loud activity is
frequently punctuated by the imposition of silence so that the teacher
can reclaim order. Other classrooms are filled with bored, sleeping
Listening to Silence in Classrooms 2841
students gazing at the clock and waiting for the period to end. In each of
these contexts, the students who speak the loudest are often those who
are heard. They are the class leaders and the people who command atten-
tion from their teachers and peers. Students who are silent often remain
unrecognized and invisible; the reasons for their silence are often
unknown by their teachers or peers. Frequently, students are silent out of
a need or desire to protect themselves. They may wish to remain
unknown to their teachers or classmates. They may not trust that others
want to invest in the time or effort to know them.
I offer three examples of student silence drawn from a study of a deseg-
regated middle school (e.g., Schultz, 2003) that demonstrate a range of
ways students use silence as a form of protection as they negotiate their
school experience. In each instance, the highlighted student is a person
of color who made decisions—consciously or not—about how to navigate
through a majority-White school. Each student used silence as a form of
protection. Margaret, an African American student, used silence to hold
onto her academic identity. Unable to find a peer group of successful stu-
dents among her Black or White peers, she chose silence as a way to hide
her decision to work hard in school. In contrast, Caroline, a student from
a mixed heritage, was an outspoken student who chose silence to fit into
her peer group. Afraid that she might be rejected for her beliefs, she
used silence to gain acceptance. Zakiya, an African American student,
chose silence to guard the details of her family life from her teachers and
classmates. Her silence allowed her to protect herself from their possible
judgment. At some point during middle school, each of these students
chose to participate in classroom life through silence.
Margaret lived in a well-maintained row home in the city with her mother
and two sisters. In her middle school, Margaret was the highest achieving
African American student in her grade and one of the highest achieving
students in the middle school as a whole. She was frequently the sole
African American student, or one of a very few, in her honors classes. She
claimed to have decided early in her school career to work hard in
school.
Despite her academic accomplishments, Margaret was not well known
by many students. For the most part, she worked quietly in the classroom,
and her silence was unbroken by either her teacher or her peers. She was
cut off from her White peers who did not understand her silence or
empathize with her isolation as one of the few Black students in each of
her classes. Margaret was also disconnected from the majority of her
2842 Teachers College Record
Black peers. She claimed that she needed to turn away from them in
exchange for academic success. In a school where most of the African
American students opted out of academic pursuits, Margaret was willing
to face alienation, loneliness, and invisibility to hold onto her desire to
achieve in school. She had to struggle daily to disassociate herself from
the negative images of urban Black students held by many of the faculty
members in the school.
In contrast to the highly visible White middle-class girls and her more
vocal Black peers, Margaret was practically invisible. Her academic suc-
cess, which required her to step outside of the practices enacted by her
African American peers, was barely recognized. She actively chose silence
to protect her identity as a high-achieving African American in this pre-
dominantly White school. Silent and invisible, she could do well in school
without being noticed (Schultz, 2003).
acceptance in a new peer group. As she looked toward high school, she
told us that she had decided to retain this stance in order to be accepted
by more students. Aware of what she might lose, Caroline protected her
position in the social hierarchy by consciously muting her voice.
Students (and indeed adults) might choose silence to gain access to dif-
ferent groups of people. At times, Caroline chose to hide her views and
enact a silent stance to gain access, at least for a short period, to her
peers. This stance allowed her to protect herself from their critique and
enact an identity as an acceptable girl in this particular classroom com-
munity (Wortham, 2006). During this period, when her teachers tried to
elicit her talk and strong opinions, she responded with silence, choosing
the approval of her peers over participation in school (Schultz, 2003).
teacher with silence and a scowl. Zakiya was failing her eighth-grade year,
and not long afterward dropped out of school. Her mostly White and
middle-class teachers and peers knew little about her life at home, her
goals, or her aspirations, which she hid through her silence. Zakiya
seemed to enact a stance of silence to protect her family and community
life that did not seem well understood by her teachers and many of her
peers. Her silence helped her to maintain her integrity in a school that
often felt alienating.
Listening for silence requires that teachers notice the academic success
of students like Margaret, the critique offered by Caroline, and the com-
plexities of negotiating home and school that Zakiya experienced, and
that they find ways to create a classroom and school culture that recog-
nizes and values their talents and contributions. Teachers can identify
students’ agentive actions through their choices of silence while remain-
ing cognizant of the constraints within which this agency operates.
Taking a listening stance toward silence suggests honoring students’
need to be silent to protect themselves, while creating structures that
offer students more choices of ways to participate in classrooms. The nar-
rator in Ellison’s (1952) novel The Invisible Man asks, “To whom can I be
responsible, and why should I be when you refuse to see me? . . .
Responsibility rests upon recognition, and recognition is a form of agree-
ment” (p. 16). Listening for silence includes recognizing students’ choice
to be silent without allowing them to become invisible. Listening to
silence includes providing students with the opportunities to reflect on
their positions in the classroom and school with forums to make their sto-
ries public while honoring their need to protect aspects of their lives.
Adults and youth alike choose silence to gain access to groups of peo-
ple who might hold different views or stances on a variety of topics.
Listening for silence encompasses noticing the decisions students make,
such as Margaret’s choice to use silence to avoid confrontation and to
hold on to her academic identity. It includes an awareness of when stu-
dents like Caroline take critical or risky stands, and supporting them to
articulate these positions. Students of color, and girls in particular, are
frequently discouraged from displaying their intelligence in school. They
often pay a high price in terms of popularity for their academic achieve-
ment. As Greene (1993) explained, “There are ways of speaking and
telling that construct silences, create “others,” invent gradations of social
difference necessary for identification of norms” (p. 216). I would add
that there are ways that youth adopt silence to gain access to new worlds
and avoid becoming an outsider. Listening to silence means acknowledg-
ing the minefields of adolescent relationships and creating possibilities
for participation through silence, or communication through other
Listening to Silence in Classrooms 2845
to emerge into talk and action. Teachers can learn to listen to the multi-
ple connotations of silence, to make spaces for silence and talk, and to
acknowledge the critical that role silence may play in classroom learning.
sis. Once teachers and students develop a vocabulary for discussing the
functions and uses of silence in another classroom, they can turn their
attention to their own classroom. Documenting silence and interaction
through audio- or videotapes provides a common text for such a discus-
sion. Rather than promoting the view that silence is a characteristic of
individual “silent students,” teachers can work to develop an understand-
ing of how a classroom community works together to produce silence.
Tracing the ways that silence works in a classroom can shift teachers’ and
students’ understandings of their roles and responsibilities for teaching
and learning.
I suggest that teachers redefine participation in classrooms to include
silence, not simply to celebrate silence but to understand how and when
silence might constitute a valid and even useful form of participation
(Schultz, 2009). At the same time, teachers must determine when silence
needs to be interrupted. For instance, what participation structures
might a teacher introduce to a classroom in order to allow, even encour-
age, students’ voices to be heard? How might a teacher listen to and
count silence as a form of participation, while attending to a student’s
writing or conversations with peers outside of formal class discussions?
Further, when should a teacher interrupt a student’s silence and demand
that she speak? Is there such a thing as a counterfeit silence, a silence
born of laziness or refusal to emotionally or intellectually engage in
school? What are the teachers’ and the students’ roles in these situations?
Is it possible to imagine how the silent student might be participating in
a useful, perhaps even a necessary, way? Does the silence allow others to
speak? Are there indicators in a student’s silence that can help teachers
pay more attention to the interpersonal or social dynamics of classrooms?
How can educators set up classrooms to invite a wider range of participa-
tion that includes silence? Teachers might begin to look at these kinds of
questions with groups of colleagues who share vignettes of practice in
teacher inquiry groups. By documenting silence in their own classrooms
and bringing these to an inquiry group, teachers can inform one
another’s practice.
As educators interrogate silences in classrooms, it is critical that stu-
dents not be allowed to choose silence as a way to opt out of learning.
Leaving room for silence is a potentially dangerous path to follow
because it might be interpreted as a way to exclude individuals or groups
of students from participation in classrooms. Rather than advocating for
silence, I urge teachers to listen deeply to both talk and silence in their
classrooms through various modes of inquiry that might include their
students or colleagues.
Classrooms are often structured around implicit and explicit rules
2848 Teachers College Record
about talk and silence. These rules contain common assumptions about
when and how silence is enacted that may ignore local cultural practices.
Although it may be difficult for a teacher to understand all of the customs
around silence and speech in her classroom, taking an inquiry stance
allows for conversation around the decisions made by individuals and
groups of students. Listening for, inquiring into, and honoring silence
might lead to louder, more dynamic and engaged classrooms that have
moments of stillness when students pause for reflection. Most important,
inquiry into classroom silence and participation might lead to classrooms
where equitable participation is defined as broadly as possible. This
includes understanding how and when youth (and adults) might choose
to remain silent and through that silence deliver a powerful speech or an
incisive critique.
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