politicsliberal

Building Bridges: How Colleges Are Teaching Students to Talk Across Divides

New Brunswick, Jersey, USAMonday, April 20, 2026

< formatted article >

Schools Are Teaching Civility—And It Might Just Save Democracy

Across the country, schools are trying something new—not to change politics, but to change how people talk about it.

At Rutgers, a project called the "Democracy Wall" doesn’t push students to pick sides. Instead, it asks them to wish for the nation’s future—and the overwhelming response? Unity over division.

A recent survey revealed that two-thirds of Americans agree: the country needs healing. But here’s the twist—not just hoping for change, some campuses are teaching students how to make it happen.


The Listening Crisis

The problem isn’t just disagreement—it’s that people have stopped listening.

Schools used to be where tough conversations happened, but now polarization feels like a national pastime. Nearly half of young people believe civil war is possible—a stark reminder that unchecked division isn’t just frustrating. It’s dangerous.

Yet, within that fear lies a solution. If students learn to debate without shouting, they might fix problems instead of making them worse.

Can Talk Really Change Anything?

Some experts argue that words alone won’t stop democracy’s backsliding. With global pressures mounting, they say action must follow.

Others compare it to gardening—you can’t rush growth, but every seed counts. Teaching students to listen today might not fix everything tomorrow, but it plants ideas that could bloom for decades.

One thing is clear: Polarization won’t heal itself. But if schools keep planting these seeds, the next generation might just grow a better conversation.

Actions