A Theory of Havruta Learning: Orit Kent
A Theory of Havruta Learning: Orit Kent
A Theory of Havruta Learning: Orit Kent
of Havruta Learning
Orit Kent
Part I: Introduction
As a form of study that originated in the traditional beit midrash,1
havruta (Jewish text study in pairs)2 has been appropriated in many
modern contexts, such as adult Jewish learning, day school and sup-
plementary school settings, Hillel gatherings, and Jewish professional
development programs, in which people study a range of texts. The
pairs sit with one another, read the text together, discuss its meaning
and, perhaps, explore broader questions about life that the text raises.
As a form of text study, havruta offers learners opportunities to foster
interpretive, social, and ethical engagement and thus has great poten-
tial for a range of people in different contexts with different learning
goals.
Some who study in havruta report enjoying the process, noting, for
example, that it gives them space to think about the text in the company
of someone else, fostering a sense of ownership of the text itself, and of
1 Beit midrash literally means “house of study” and refers to a place where Jews
study texts, often in pairs or havruta. Traditionally, the beit midrash was a place
where Jewish men studied Talmud out loud.
2 The Aramaic term havruta means friendship or companionship and is common-
ly used to refer to two people studying Jewish texts together. In this article, the
term havruta refers to both the learning pair and the practice of paired learning.
The history of havruta as a widespread learning practice is subject to scholarly
debate. (See Orit Kent, “Interactive Text Study and the Co-Construction of
Meaning : Havruta in the DeLeT Beit Midrash,” doctoral dissertation, Brandeis
University, 2008,” for a discussion of this issue.) The reason for my focus on
havruta is that, in our historical context, it has come to be seen and used by
many Jewish teachers and learners as a core mode of text learning and as such
is worthy of investigation.
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being in conversation with the text. Others, or the same people at other
times, find the process frustrating: havruta partners may not work well
together, or get stuck and not know what to do next, or spend most
of their time digressing from the topic at hand. However, whether the
experiences are meaningful or disappointing, there is generally little
critical understanding of the specifics of the process that took place
leading to the particular outcome, and thus little knowledge about how
to recreate or avoid such outcomes in the future.3
Perhaps because havruta has generally been used in traditional Jew-
ish contexts such as yeshivot, modern educational scholarship has not
taken a close look at this learning practice in order to unpack it and
explore what makes for better or worse havruta experiences.4 In my own
research, I have used the lens of educational and learning theories to
analyze real-life havruta interactions in all their specificity, asking: what
can we learn about text study and students’ meaning-making through
a close examination of adults studying classical Jewish texts in one par-
ticular beit midrash setting?
In the early phases of my research, I conducted a pilot study in order
to illuminate some of the rhythms and complexities of havruta learn-
ing. I identified havruta as a complex and potentially powerful Jewish
3 These examples of satisfying and unsatisfying experiences are drawn from dis-
cussions over several years with my students in the DeLeT Beit Midrash for
Teachers as well as from their written reflections.
4 This has begun to change in recent years. See, for example, Elie Holzer and Orit
Kent, “Havruta: What Do We Know and What Can We Hope to Learn from
Studying in Havruta?”, in International Handbook of Jewish Education 5 (New
York: Springer, 2011): 407-417; Miriam Raider-Roth and Elie Holzer, “Learn-
ing to be Present: How Hevruta Learning Can Activate Teachers’ Relationships
to Self, Other and Text,” Journal of Jewish Education 75: 3 (2009): 216-239;
Steven Brown and Mitchell Malkus, “Hevruta as a Form of Cooperative Learn-
ing,” Journal of Jewish Education 73: 3 (2007): 209-26; Sharon Feiman-Nemser,
“Beit Midrash for Teachers: An Experiment in Teacher Preparation,” Journal
of Jewish Education 72: 3 (2006): 161-83; Elie Holzer, “What Connects ‘Good’
Teaching, Text Study and Hevruta Learning? A Conceptual Argument,” Journal
of Jewish Education 72: 3 (2006): 183-205; Orit Kent, “Interactive Text Study:
A Case of Hevruta Learning,” Journal of Jewish Education 72: 3 (2006): 205-
232; Aliza Segal, Havruta Study: History, Benefits, and Enhancements (Jerusalem:
ATID, 2003).
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8 See Barney G. Glaser and Anselm L. Strauss, The Discovery of Grounded Theory:
Strategies for Qualitative Research (New York: Aldine Transaction, 1967), and
Aldine de Gruyter and John R. Cutcliffe, “Methodological Issues in Grounded
Theory,” Journal of Advanced Nursing 31: 6 (2000): 1476-1484.
9 See James Paul Gee, An Introduction to Discourse Analysis, Theory and Method
(New York: Routledge, 2005), and Charles Goodwin, “Conversation Analysis,”
Annual Review of Anthropology 19 (1990): 283-307.
10 Sophie Haroutunian-Gordon, Learning to Teach Through Discussion: The Art of
Turning the Soul (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009), and Haroutunian-
Gordon, Turning the Soul, Teaching through Conversations in the High School (Chi-
cago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).
11 Elizabeth G. Cohen, “Restructuring the Classroom: Conditions for Productive
Small Groups,” Review of Educational Research 64: 1 (1994): 1-35, Elizabeth G.
Cohen, et al.,”Can Groups Learn?” Teachers College Record 104: 6 (2002): 1045-68.
12 David W. Johnson and Roger T. Johnson, Learning Together and Alone: Coopera-
tive, Competitive, and Individualistic Learning, 5th ed. (Boston: Alyn and Bacon,
1999).
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17 Lucy McCormick Calkins, The Art of Teaching Reading (New York: Longman,
2001).
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Together with your havruta, study this text very carefully.… Offer
a compelling interpretation of the story of R. Shimi and R. Papa.
Then insert 2 sentences (not more!) to help a potential reader bet-
ter understand your interpretation of the story. This interpreta-
tion needs to be an outcome of your havruta study. You may offer
a second interpretation on a separate sheet.
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LAURIE: Oh, my gosh. Well, okay, so it seems, I mean the first thing
that stands out the most is this insolence thing, because there’s
something that Rabbi Papa really, really doesn’t like about the fact
that he’s asking him so many questions, or I think, at least I’m con-
necting the rudeness with the question asking. It doesn’t say that
specifically, but do you think, what do you think? What connection
would you make between—
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LAURIE: Ya.
DEBBIE: So it must have been, the insolence must have been in the
kinds of questions.
LAURIE: Hmm.
LAURIE: Ya.
LAURIE: Ya.
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LAURIE: Ya.
As Debbie starts to talk, one sees from her articulation that Deb-
bie is actually listening to a number of things: she is listening to what
Laurie said about there being a connection between the questions and
insolence and responding to it; she is listening to the text stating that
R. Papa prayed to God to “preserve him” from R. Shimi’s questions; and
she is listening to her own notion that asking questions is generally a
good thing for students to do. Building off of the ideas she has gathered
through listening in different directions, Debbie determines that R.
Shimi’s questions must have been insolent and then gets more specific
in articulating her interpretation, providing examples of the types of
rude questions that R. Shimi may have asked.
The conversation continues as follows:
LAURIE: Well, no, because I liked what you were saying about how
there’s an action that takes place here or something, or then you said
oh, no, wait, he did see him, so he knew what he said. I think that’s
what you were—
DEBBIE: Hmhm.
DEBBIE: Right.
LAURIE: But I agree with you that there’s still some kind of tran-
sition that occurs here where he changes his attitude and he vows
silence. So there’s just some, the way I see it, there’s some internal
change or something, like he’s no longer inquisitive. He’s silent for
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whatever reason, whether, and I’m curious what you think, whether,
I mean maybe there’s not a person who’s right and wrong, but is it,
was he really asking rude questions or was he just, or was the teacher
just overreacting and he’s now silenced his student, who is just cu-
rious and is trying to inquire? So I don’t know. Maybe we can talk
about that in a minute, but—
Types of Listening
Debbie and Laurie’s exchange calls attention to a number of different
ways that havruta partners listen to one another: listening to follow
along, listening to understand, and listening to figure something out.21
Debbie and Laurie both listen in order to follow the other’s ideas. Listen-
ing to follow along means that one focuses on hearing the other’s words
in order to keep up and not lose the place. (Sometimes the objective in
listening to follow along is to gear up for one’s own turn, though that
runs the risk of not really listening while one mostly waits out the other
person until one can articulate.) Debbie and Laurie provide each other
with many listening cues to demonstrate that they are following along,
as will be discussed shortly.
Listening to understand is different from listening to follow along.
When one havruta partner tries to understand the other’s ideas, the
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LAURIE: Well, no, because I liked what you were saying about how
there’s an action that takes place here or something, or then you said
oh, no, wait, he did see him, so he knew what he said. I think that’s
what you were—
DEBBIE: Hmhm.
DEBBIE: Right.
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Listening Cues
It is not necessarily always clear to one havruta partner that the other
partner is listening to her, and Laurie and Debbie provide each other
with many cues to indicate listening and their interest in hearing each
other’s articulations. They demonstrate that they are following along
when they fill in each other’s words, with their many “hms” and “ya’s”
after each other’s comments, and by their attentive demeanors. They
look at each other and the text a lot, they nod their head as the other
one is speaking, they say “yes” over and over again in response to what
the other one says, and they invite the other to speak by saying: “What
do you think?” or stating an interpretive idea as a question. They also
paraphrase or “revoice” the other’s words.23 All of these cues indicate
that each partner takes the other person’s ideas seriously and listens to
them, encouraging further articulations. These listening cues are very
important because they can encourage the articulator to keep working
at his or her articulation and not stop thinking about the particular idea
before she has tried to fully work it out. The listening and articulating
dance thus continues.
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Types of Articulations
Laurie and Debbie’s exchange also call attention to two types of articu-
lations: exploratory articulations and definitive articulations. Much of
the early parts of Laurie and Debbie’s havruta is full of exploratory ar-
ticulations, articulations that have the quality of thinking out loud. For
example, at the very beginning of the transcript excerpt, Laurie thinks
out loud about the sense of the text and tries to elicit a response from
Debbie. Again:
LAURIE: Well, okay, so it seems, I mean the first thing that stands
out the most is this insolence thing, because there’s something that
Rabbi Papa really, really doesn’t like about the fact that he’s asking
him so many questions, or I think, at least I’m connecting the rude-
ness with the question asking. It doesn’t say that specifically, but do
you think, what do you think? What connection would you make
between … rudeness and what’s already happened?
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24 Peter Elbow, Embracing Contraries (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986).
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LAURIE: … Maybe there’s not a person who’s right and wrong, but
is it, was he really asking rude questions or was he just, or was the
teacher just overreacting and he’s now silenced his student, who is
just curious and is trying to inquire.…
DEBBIE: … One of the things that I think you also touched upon is
what is the nature of this kid.—
LAURIE: Ya.
DEBBIE:—Is this kid doing something that is, you know, not ap-
propriate or is the teacher overreacting, or is the child, you know ?
LAURIE: Because there are definitely kids who say “teacher, teacher,”
all the time, but—
LAURIE: Ya.
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been asking questions that were inappropriate and this and that, but
think about a kid in the classroom who specifically wants to make a
stir. Just by hearing the teacher saying, you know, “may God preserve
me from the insolence of” the student, I don’t think necessarily that
child would make a change if their intent was to be mischievous in
their questions,—
LAURIE: Hm.
DEBBIE: So how about we start? Okay. ((Reading out loud from the
text:)) “Rabbi Shimi b. Ashi used to attend the lessons of Rabbi Papa.”
Okay, so—
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LAURIE: So. Okay, wait. First, sorry. Before we make our sentences,
I’m just trying to go back to the bigger picture.
DEBBIE: Okay.
DEBBIE: Oh, gosh. You know, the first thing is that any discourage-
ment a student gets, you could really shut them off and really, it
makes a big impact on their willingness to be open just based on the
tiniest thing.… What do you think?
While Debbie has started to focus on the task, Laurie pulls them back
to consider “our theory” and consider the Big Idea behind the narrative.
Debbie at this point has an interpretation with which she is satisfied
and hence is interested in shifting gears. She feels that she has answered
the question of “who is at fault”—R. Shimi was overly inquisitive and R.
Papa overreacted, so both R. Papa and R. Shimi are at fault in some way.
Laurie is not satisfied with this as an answer; there are still issues she is
trying to figure out.
Laurie’s question about what this text says about the teacher-student
relationship reframes their discussion from being just about R. Shimi and
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To Wonder or to Focus?
In the case of Laurie and Debbie, wondering often takes the form of
working on different ways of understanding a text. This occurs when the
havruta is curious about the meaning of the text and considers different
alternatives in an attempt to figure out the best way to make sense of the
text. Wondering entails asking many questions, most basically, “What
does this mean?” Debbie and Laurie also focus on particular ideas or
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ways to understand the text. They keep those ideas at the center of their
attention for a given period of time. This kind of focusing gives havrutot
an opportunity to deepen an initial idea and try to work it through. In
generative havruta discussion, focusing on a way of understanding the
text occurs in dynamic relationship with wondering about the meaning
of the text.
When havrutot initially read a text, they often respond in one of two
ways in their effort to make sense of the text: (a) They very quickly come
up with an interpretation about the meaning of the text, focusing on
that one approach; (b) they leave things more open and wonder about
the meaning of the text, returning to it multiple times in order to figure
it out. In this example, Debbie and Laurie use the second strategy. This
phase of their discussion is a time to immerse themselves in the text and
wonder out loud about its meaning, coming up with many creative ideas
about how to read the text. The unstated and even unconscious dilemma
is that if the havruta wonders in too many directions, it will end up
wandering and not move forward with any one idea. At the same time,
if havrutot do not wonder, they often get carried away by unexplored
and underdeveloped first impressions. In addition, the act of wondering
allows partners to take hold of the text in their own ways, sparking a
certain level of creative energy that helps fuel and refuel the havruta
interaction. While Debbie and Laurie engage in this kind of immersive
wondering in the early phase of their havruta, as time passes they be-
come more focused on their emerging ideas and also on completing the
task at hand.
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keeps them engaged with each other and the text. It creates a purpose
to their conversation—to figure out whether R. Shimi is at fault because
somehow his questions were rude, or whether R. Papa overreacted to
R. Shimi. The result is that the wondering is not wandering, but allows
them to build a more and more comprehensive interpretation. This is
a kind of focused wondering, with a focus that is sustained over time.
Their conversation will conclude when they have satisfactorily addressed
their genuine issue.
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Laurie and Debbie each make supportive moves to explicitly help the
other develop her ideas.
DEBBIE: Oh, gosh. You know, the first thing is that any discourage-
ment a student gets, you could really shut them off and really, it makes
a big impact on their willingness to be open just based on the tiniest
thing, but what’s hard about what I just said and hearing myself say-
ing it is that this was not meant to be heard, it seems because “one
day he observed that,” you know, it seems that this was supposed to
be private. So I don’t know if this was, if it wasn’t intentional. I wish
I knew what happened afterwards with Rabbi Shimi and Rabbi Papa,
their interaction and, and ya. What do you think?
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LAURIE: I think it’s going to the extreme and it’s saying even when
you’re alone and you don’t think anyone’s listening, it can still filter
out and, your students can still pick up on it.
DEBBIE: But then doesn’t that go against the whole notion of be-
ing able to pray and open up to God? Let’s say you’re, you know, it’s
during the lunchtime and he’s doing the minchah service and he did
this as he’s praying. He said this, hoping, maybe to get strength, you
know, like you said before, to preserve him from lashing out at this
child. And then Shimi heard that. So I wonder: Is it saying to not
open up your feelings even alone because somebody might hear you
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because if you don’t, you know, it seems like he’s calling out to God
to help him. You know, “Please preserve me from this rude child so
I won’t kill him.” But Shimi, I mean I think it’s, line four is a pivotal
point because it shows the outcome of hearing such a prayer.
LAURIE: Yah. And I think the other thing is that Shimi, I think
there’s, I agree. I think that there’s sort of a disconnect here, where
this [Shimi becoming silent] shows what happened, but Shimi could
have also gone to him and said “I heard you. What’s that about?” in-
stead of just becoming silent, and he, Rabbi Papa, could have talked
to him instead of, I don’t think it’s saying don’t open up to God but
it seems like—
Laurie is suggesting that the story could have been played out differ-
ently—that it might have had a different ending if R. Shimi had talked
directly to R. Papa or if R. Papa had talked directly to R. Shimi. She is not
trying to say that the lesson is not to open up to God, but that saying
things when you are alone doesn’t help you avoid negative consequences
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27 See the definition of and discussion about co-building in Orit Kent, “Interactive
Text Study: A Case of Hevruta Learning,” and Kent, “Interactive Text Study and
the Co-Construction of Meaning.”
28 It is worth noting that in both the text as understood here by Debbie and in
the havruta pair itself, encouragement and support keeps questions and ideas
in play and people engaged, and discouragement and lack of support serve to
shut off the development of questions and ideas, and also possibly the person
him- or herself.
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notes that R. Papa’s prayer was not meant to be overheard. Laurie takes
this latter idea and develops it further, stating that since it wasn’t meant
to be overheard and R. Papa didn’t directly go to R. Shimi and ask him
to be quiet, R. Shimi’s silence can be understood as an unintended and
unfortunate outcome of R. Shimi overhearing something not intended
for his ears. Laurie’s extension of Debbie’s idea allows her to suggest a
slightly different big idea, which is focused less on the interaction be-
tween teacher and student and more on the unintended consequences
of one’s actions. As Laurie says, “You have to be really careful because
you don’t know who can hear you.…” This is an idea that Debbie further
extends in the latter part of their havruta.
A third level of supporting comes in the form of making explicit
moves to help one’s partner develop her idea. This comes in the form of
asking questions about one’s partner’s interpretation or the text that
creates space for her to think some more, clarify her ideas, and flesh
them out further. For example, Laurie asks Debbie, “So what do we think
this is saying or could be saying about the teacher-student relationship
maybe?”29 and then pauses so that Debbie can think out loud. Explicit
supporting moves also come in the form of offering supporting evidence
for one’s partner’s idea. For example, as Laurie builds on Debbie’s idea,
she points to what is missing from the text to support their idea that
R. Papa didn’t intentionally silence R. Shimi. She notes that the text
doesn’t tell them that R. Papa went to R. Shimi to ask him to be quiet.
“He’s not going directly to him and saying please don’t ask me any more
questions.” This extra bit of support for the idea seems to give the idea
staying power for this havruta. Both Debbie and Laurie continue to be
in agreement through the rest of the havruta that R. Papa didn’t intend
for R. Shimi to overhear him.
In these examples, all three types of supporting moves are focused on
the ideas and the thinking, and not the person. This is important. The
point of offering support is not that one likes or dislikes one’s partner,
or even necessarily likes or dislikes her idea, but that one is commit-
ted to helping develop the richest interpretations possible. Even if one
29 This question also signifies the practices of both listening and wondering. It is
useful to notice that in just one move a learner can engage in more than one
havruta practice.
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doesn’t agree with one’s partner (at least at first), one can still support
her in making her ideas stronger. In the process of doing so, one may
gain insight into one’s partner’s ideas, or even one’s own. All three types
of supporting moves are directed at the ideas on the table and are a
means to encourage them forward.
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The Importance
of Constructive Challenging
In their book Academic Controversy,30 Johnson, Johnson, and Smith talk
about the need for a “supportive climate” and a cooperative mode of
working together for people to feel safe enough to challenge one another
and to do so effectively. In the context in which Laurie and Debbie are
learning together, the DeLeT Beit Midrash for Teachers, teachers spend
time helping students create a spirit of collaboration, which focuses on
the idea that havruta is a mutual undertaking—that both parties need
each other in order to maximize their learning, augmenting each other’s
individual learning and doing things collectively that we cannot do as
individuals—and that a successful havruta relies on each party being
willing to take responsibility not only for her own learning but for her
partner’s learning as well.
Even before DeLeT students begin to study with each other, havruta
partners meet to discuss their strengths and weaknesses as teachers
and learners and how they might best be able to support one another
through the course of the beit midrash. They continue to pay attention
to their working relationship, reflecting on it and giving each other feed-
back about it, throughout their time in the beit midrash. In fact, in the
middle of the course, each pair tape records itself so that pair members
can look for evidence of ways that they are helping their partners’ learn-
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ing and also examine instances when they make moves that get in their
partners’ way. For example, some students have pointed to the fact that
they cut their partners off, not fully listening to their partners’ ideas
and helping them develop them further. The ongoing development of a
sense of collaboration can, among other things, help havrutot success-
fully engage in challenging one another’s ideas.31
Part of building a collaborative environment entails helping students
develop a commitment to working together to develop the most com-
pelling ideas possible, not simply sticking with an idea at the expense
of all else. It is this commitment that can motivate them to put their
own ideas aside for a moment, and stop to think about someone else’s
idea and how to make it stronger through supporting moves as well
as investigate its weak points through challenging moves. In this way,
constructive challenging is very different than debating, in which the
goal is to win by making points that are often at the expense of one’s col-
leagues. The goal of constructive challenging within havruta is to work
with one’s partner to notice the limitations of the ideas on the table
(whatever their origins) and refine them. When effective, challenging
can help a havruta come up with a better articulated interpretation, a
more all-encompassing idea, or a new idea altogether.
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Part V: Conclusion
32 Laurent A. Daloz, Mentor, Guiding the Journey of Adult Learners (San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, 1999).
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33 John Dewey, Experience and Education (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1938/1997).
34 Patricia F. Carini, ed., Observation and Description: An Alternative Methodology
for the Investigation of Human Phenomena, North Dakota Study Group on Evalu-
ation (North Dakota: University of North Dakota Press, 1975), 15.
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