Ahmed Messaoudi · Teaching sequence

Rediscovering Empathy in Digital Interactions

A classroom protocol for moving beyond the artificial divide between “online” and “offline”, and what it does to our moral sense.

Thinking with AI  ·   ·  5 min read

Digital interactions often create a distance that makes us forget the real presence of people behind screens, profiles and avatars. This phenomenon of online disinhibition, the fact that a person feels released from ordinary social constraints when sheltered by a screen, is one of the most powerful drivers of cyberbullying.

This sequence aims to make concrete what remains abstract behind a screen, and to restore a moral continuity between what one allows oneself online and what one would allow oneself face to face.

Fundamental principle: respect, responsibility and attention to others should apply whether we are face to face with someone or behind a screen.

Main competence

Recognising the mechanisms of online disinhibition and understanding why some people behave differently on social networks than they do in real life.

Cross-curricular competences

Developing empathy in digital contexts, analysing the emotional impact of online exchanges, and building structured and defensible argumentation.

Step 1 Collective debate and exploration 30–45 min
Whole-class discussion. Students examine the emotional impact of digital exchanges through a collective analysis of concrete situations.

Questions to begin the discussion

Step 2 Arguments and pleadings 55–70 min
Groups of four students. Contradictory debate format: two students defend the “for”, two defend the “against”. Each group receives one question from the list below.

Phase 1 — Preparation

45–60 minutes. Researching arguments and building a structured plea. AI may be used as a research tool, provided that students retain control over the reasoning.

Phase 2 — Oral presentations

Ten minutes per group: five minutes for the “for” plea, five minutes for the “against” plea.

Possible questions for the groups

Compact sequence map

  1. Collective debate (30–45 min) — exploring the mechanisms of online disinhibition and analysing concrete situations.
  2. Preparation of pleadings (45–60 min) — building contradictory arguments in groups of four.
  3. Oral presentations (10 min per group) — confronting the “for” and “against” arguments before the class.

Possible extension

A collective drafting of a class charter for digital communication: students formulate for themselves the rules they commit to respecting, online as well as offline.

Assessment criteria for the pleadings

Read next

Yes-Man Attitude: When AI Always Agrees with Us →

To situate the approach: A Digital Ethic.