General Resources
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www.p4c.com has a huge wealth of resources (I'm a director of p4c.com but Steve Williams is the main force behind it. He is one
Excellent books
Filosofi for sjov by Stephen Law
The Pig that Wants to be Eaten and 99 Other Thought Experiments
TÆNK HØJT med dine elever: 25 sessioner der får hele klassen med
Saturday Keynote
Faciltator Facilitatee (The coaching questions)
Saturday Philosophy-in-role Workshop
Alien Adventures in Philosophy
Sunday Workshop
Below is a range of English resources I usually give access to after a training session.
Thank you all for joining me for the session. This resources page is a bit generic - putting one together for every online or face-to-face session I do would take longer than the session and be a lot less fun. So instead, here is a generous helping of stuff and links to other stuff. Also, feel free to email jason@thephilosophyman.com or ring me direct on 07843 555355 with your questions about P4C or to see how I can help support your school with training, workshops and resources.
Powerpoint from the Training Session
I may or may not have used a PPT during the session. The slides won't make an awful lot of sense without me talking about them. If they did, I could have left the PPT running and you could have read them for yourselves! But they might remind you of some key concepts.
Free Bulletin of Resources
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Help Me Find My Voice E-book and Other Files
These are some particularly useful resources.
Help Me Find My Voice strategies for hearing from reluctant speakers
A powerpoint of "Chinese Listening" suitable for use in an assembly.
A session on "When do you stop being a Child" I sometime mention in keynotes
Facilitator Facilitatee with those powerful coaching questions, and the lanyard version with them in speech bubble format (by Jane Durrant of Winterbourne Juniors)
The Discussion Dashboard - a useful source of advice for facilitating philosophical enquiries. Includes a formative assessment cycle using troubleshooting questions paired with activities tailored to the development of the relevant skills.
Sticky Questions
Thousands of children in the UK and abroad get a "Sticky Question" each week, to talk about at home and bring their ideas back to discuss at school. It's the single easiest way to start building philosophy and a love of questions into your school, costing about 3p per child per week.
Online Shop
Click the button to the right to visit our online shop.
Resources for Philosophy Circles
This is a sample of sessions plans. You get over 200 of them if you buy the Primary Curriculum Pack.
Thinkers' Games
Click for examples of games that make thinking physical.
Our Youtube Channel...
This has 100 Spot and Stripe videos, lots of tips on facilitation, and community builders (games you can use as warm-ups for a philosophy session, or as stand-alone oracy activities). Click here to see the full collection.
And here's an assembly video on the philosophy of The Metaverse
You might have had P4C training before, but our approach is more flexible, accessible, embeddable - in a word, "doable".
The traditional way of doing P4C, in stand-alone sessions of around one hour, may not fit in your timetable. Teaching staff, already under pressure from all the things they need to squeeze in to the week, are wary of taking on “yet another thing”, and don’t feel they are ready to plan what to do and know that they are “doing it right”. So, although you want to, you lack the support you need to take the plunge.
The philosophy never gets to the children, and they never get the benefits of talking independently about challenging questions. Your quiet children stay quiet, and never get the chance to get their ideas out to the wider world. So how do you take philosophy from “nice idea” to something that is embedded in the life of your school?
The traditional arc of a P4C Enquiry takes 50 minutes to 1 hour. We would still advocate for this as the destination, but for many schools it's such a big commitment that it prevents them taking the first steps. Each Philosophy Circles session can fit into 30 minutes, and because it is a different way of exploring existing content, it's not "yet another thing to do"; instead, another way to do things. It explores your existing topics and texts for deep discussion opportunities, often drawing on "in role" scenarios to combine creative and critical thinking.
To help you embed P4C as easily and effectively as possible, we have designed a Philosophy Circles School Pack, comprised of Teachers' Handbooks, 100+ session plans for every subject in the curriculum, and online video tutorials.
Get Moving
Compelling, physically active openings to promote everybody’s engagement. How to bring playground confidence into the classroom and create engagement from the first minute.
Y-Questions
Opportunities for sustained disagreement that create CHALLENGE. How to spot juicy philosophical questions within your existing subjects to generate deeper learning.
Take a Back Seat
The crucial shift in the teacher’s role and status that give children INDEPENDENCE. How to plan less and feel confident in letting discussion grow organically.
