(MENAFN- The Conversation) As universities roar back to life with renewed expectations, students head to institutions that will shape their lives both now and in the future.
At university, students are presented with various opportunities to of these communities. They may be asked to answer surveys, vote or — if they are confident enough — run for elected positions in a student union or as a class representative.
As researchers interested in exploring novel approaches to practising democracy in organizations, we see this type of participation as crucial.
It can enable diverse groups of students to interact, tackle important issues, hold universities accountable and develop their capacities to be confident, engaged and thoughtful participants in civic life.
Pressing aspirations
These aspirations are all the more pressing in light of democracy's current challenges — like , and .
Universities have a role in revitalizing democracy. Yet, despite the merits of contemporary approaches to student participation in university governance, these tend to face major deficiencies.
We argue that universities should look to democratic innovations seen with initiatives .
Efforts to engage students on campus have much to learn from democratic innovation in civil society. (Shutterstock) Looking to democratic innovations
Climate Assembly UK was initiated by a group of select committees of the United Kingdom's House of Commons. Organizers selected the 108 members — made up of everyday citizens — through a .
The use of a lottery brought together a diverse group of voices, representative of the demographic profile of the U.K., and distributed opportunities for civic engagement more equitably across the population.
Over six weekends, these citizens heard from a range of experts and stakeholders and deliberated together with the support of independent facilitators. They developed and presented recommendations spanning topics including consumption, travel and greenhouse gas removals.
Climate Assembly UK members' report. Climate Assembly UK is just one example of a whose use has been globally.
They've been used to tackle issues like , , and .
Problems go beyond headlines
In the world of university student politics, recent years in Canada saw reporting about , , threatened over polarizing decisions and the of a student federation over misconduct allegations.
Reporting about these challenges also makes headlines in the and
Our finds such headlines are symptomatic of wider problems.
Shortcomings are less about people and more about the approaches used to involve them. Traditional approaches ultimately fail to foster universities' capacity to have inclusive and thoughtful discussion shape decision-making — their“ .” After all, in any democracy, people expect more than simply staying out of scandal.
Limitations of surveys, voting, running for office
While surveys are easy to administer, they limit student voice to top-of-the-head responses. They provide information isolated from background context and collect views unevenly across demographics.
Like voting — which regularly suffers from — surveys also offer limited opportunity for students to develop civic skills and capacities like critical thinking and communication.
Is answering surveys really the best way to engage student opinion? (Shutterstock) For those few students ready to overcome barriers to running for, and winning, elected roles, more intensive experiences await. But these experiences are often in unsupported environments that foster conflictual or self-interested approaches to shared concerns.
Yet another question is the extent to which these elected students of the student body.
More deliberative student influence
Some universities are beginning to experiment with mini-publics. Our own universities experimented with a“” on pandemic learning and a“” on youth participation in democracy and civil political discourse.
The London School of Economics' recently used this approach to redesign its democratic structures.
Our that, if done well, the key features of mini-publics provide a compelling means of more inclusive, deliberative student influence and should be used much more broadly.
A student mini-public could be commissioned by either university or student union leadership. The gathering size can be tailored — from a jury of 12 students to an assembly of 150. Mini-publics can be purposefully combined with existing opportunities like representation on boards of directors to maximize impact.
Through mini-publics, students could address a wide range of important and potentially controversial issues that university communities can act on, like universities' strategies for tackling climate change or campus free speech or student housing.
Mini-publics could help universities engage students in deliberations about tackling climate change. (Shutterstock) Tackling a student housing strategy
A university seeking to might convene a student mini-public of 36 students to tackle the issue.
Using a democratic lottery would ensure the mini-public reflects the diversity of the student body based on characteristics like gender, academic year, race, international versus domestic enrolment status, income and current housing situation.
Students would access balanced and comprehensive briefing materials on topics like the university's current land use policies, environmental strategies and finances. They would learn from experts like urban planners and researchers, as well as stakeholders like residence services staff, local developers and other students.
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Their recommendations would be shared not only with relevant decision-makers, but also the broader student body to help inform conversations in the student newspaper or social media, in dining halls or in the student pub.
Such an approach would give every student an equal chance to contribute and develop, help guard against the distortions of the self-selecting“usual suspects,” and facilitate a student voice that reflects the diversity of backgrounds, personalities and needs in the student body.
Thoughtful, representative decisions
Built-in learning, facilitation and deliberation means that decisions are informed and shaped by others' perspectives.
This not only means more thoughtful and representative decisions, but a greater diversity of students accessing meaningful, deliberative civic education.
While there is still a lot to learn about incorporating student mini-publics, they are an exciting and realistic prospect.
It's crucial universities take innovative steps to foster more inclusive, deliberative approaches while educating for the kind of democracy we want.