On the importance of critical thinking skills and how to teach them - presented at the eLearning Consortium of Colorado (eLCC) Conference, April 18, 2014 - Breckenridge, CO
Critical thinking is a intellectually disciplined process of actively and skilfully conceptualising, applying, synthesising and evaluating information gathered by observation, experience, reasoning or communication as a guide to belief and action.
Introduction to Critical Thinking SkillsHanis Razak
Definition of critical thinking, core critical thinking skills, asking questions, characteristics of critical thinkers, standard for critical thinkers and exercises.
This slideshow was created with images from the web. I claim no copyright or ownership of any images. If a copyright owner of any image objects to the use in this slideshow, contact me to remove it. This is for a course in Introductory Psychology using Wayne Weiten's "Psychology: Themes and Variations" 8th ed. Published by Cengage
Critical thinking is a intellectually disciplined process of actively and skilfully conceptualising, applying, synthesising and evaluating information gathered by observation, experience, reasoning or communication as a guide to belief and action.
Introduction to Critical Thinking SkillsHanis Razak
Definition of critical thinking, core critical thinking skills, asking questions, characteristics of critical thinkers, standard for critical thinkers and exercises.
This slideshow was created with images from the web. I claim no copyright or ownership of any images. If a copyright owner of any image objects to the use in this slideshow, contact me to remove it. This is for a course in Introductory Psychology using Wayne Weiten's "Psychology: Themes and Variations" 8th ed. Published by Cengage
Your Life Satisfaction Score (beta) is an indicator of how you thrive in your life: it reflects how well you shape your lifestyle, habits and behaviors to maximize your overall life satisfaction along the five following dimensions:
►1. Health & fitness, reflecting your physical well-being and healthy habits;
►2. Positive emotions & gratitude, indicating how well you embrace positive emotions;
►3. Skills & expertise, measuring the ability to grow your expertise and achieve something unique;
►4. Social skills & discovery, assessing the strength of your network and your inclination to discover the world;
►5. Leadership & meaning, gauging your compassion, generosity and how much 'you are living the life of your dream'.
Visit www.Authentic-Happiness.com to check your Life Satisfaction score. Free, no registration required.
Cultivating Critical Thinking in ClassroomSaima Abedi
Critical thinking skills are necessary to succeed in education or in the workplace. Therefore, this ppt aims to foster independent thinking, personal autonomy and reasoned judgment in thought and action by elucidating in-depth understanding of the concept and its importance. It will help participants to explore more about Blooms taxonomy and compose well-structured instructional objectives for development of cognitive domains. Lastly, I will share assessment techniques that can be unquestionably adjusted in any lesson plan as effective measurement tools for critical thinking skills.
critical thinking is the most important concept with every day life like, school,work place, society for more information reed this power point.five point of this power point .What is critical thinking?
• Characteristics of a critical thinking
• Critical thinking standards
• benefits to critical thinking
• barriers of critical thinking
• How to improve critical thinking
Your Life Satisfaction Score (beta) is an indicator of how you thrive in your life: it reflects how well you shape your lifestyle, habits and behaviors to maximize your overall life satisfaction along the five following dimensions:
►1. Health & fitness, reflecting your physical well-being and healthy habits;
►2. Positive emotions & gratitude, indicating how well you embrace positive emotions;
►3. Skills & expertise, measuring the ability to grow your expertise and achieve something unique;
►4. Social skills & discovery, assessing the strength of your network and your inclination to discover the world;
►5. Leadership & meaning, gauging your compassion, generosity and how much 'you are living the life of your dream'.
Visit www.Authentic-Happiness.com to check your Life Satisfaction score. Free, no registration required.
Cultivating Critical Thinking in ClassroomSaima Abedi
Critical thinking skills are necessary to succeed in education or in the workplace. Therefore, this ppt aims to foster independent thinking, personal autonomy and reasoned judgment in thought and action by elucidating in-depth understanding of the concept and its importance. It will help participants to explore more about Blooms taxonomy and compose well-structured instructional objectives for development of cognitive domains. Lastly, I will share assessment techniques that can be unquestionably adjusted in any lesson plan as effective measurement tools for critical thinking skills.
critical thinking is the most important concept with every day life like, school,work place, society for more information reed this power point.five point of this power point .What is critical thinking?
• Characteristics of a critical thinking
• Critical thinking standards
• benefits to critical thinking
• barriers of critical thinking
• How to improve critical thinking
These slides are specific phd thesis help for a talk I gave at Dublin City University on 15 May 2014. They should be helpful for any in a European context about to turn in their final thesis pre viva
My approach to teaching critical thinking with a flipped-classroom approach in Introductory Biology, BIO 101. I teach students to evaluate the claims made in popular press articles about health claims (how activities, lifestyles, medicines or health treatments affect some aspect of health).
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
1. What is Critical Thinking, and
How to Teach It?
Peter Jeschofnig, Ph.D.
Institute for Excellence in Distance Science Education
2. Expected Outcomes
• Critical Thinking Research Results
• What is and what is NOT Critical Thinking
• Scientific Method and Critical Thinking
Processes
• Teaching Strategies & Examples
• Resources & References
3. Notable Quotes
• Thinking is the hardest work there is, which is
probably why so few engage in it. (Henry Ford)
• At a certain age some people’s minds close
up. They live on their intellectual fat (William Lyon
Phelps)
• He who asks a question may be a fool for five
minutes, but he who never asks a question
remains a fool forever. (Tom Connelly)
4. Evidence from Critical Thinking Research
Research Findings by Richard Paul, 1996:
• 140 interviews of college faculty
• 89% indicate critical thinking is a primary
objective of their instruction
• 19% could give a clear explanation of critical
thinking
• 77% had difficulty describing how to balance
content coverage with fostering critical thinking
• 8-9% could articulate how to assess critical
thinking
5. More Evidence from Critical Thinking
Research
Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses (2009)
Richard Arum & Josipsa Rocksa followed 2,300+ college students.
45 percent of students "did not demonstrate any significant
improvement in learning" during the first two years of college.
36 percent of students "did not demonstrate any significant
improvement in learning" over four years of college.
Those students who do show improvements tend to show only
modest improvements.
6. Non-Scientific Beliefs Among
Undergraduate Students
Astronomy Education Review; 2012,
http://www.uwo.ca/sci/pdf/NonScientificBeliefsAmongUndergradStudents.pdf
A 22 year survey of 11,000 undergraduates’
knowledge and attitudes related to science and
technology found:
• Nonscientific ways of thinking are resistant to
formal instruction
• Change surprisingly little over the course of a
college career that typically includes three science
courses.
7. Multiple Choice Exams: Obstacle for Higher Level Thinking
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3433302/
11. The Death of Critical Thinking:
Scary NYU Study
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCBB0AQqTF8
12. Famous Names in Pseudo-Science
• Dr. Mehmed Oz – Dr. Oz Show
• Dr. Andrew Wakefield – anti-vaccine
• Oprah Winfrey
• Jenny McCarthy - anti-vaccine
• Chuck Norris – teach biblical alternatives in
school
• Various political commentators (incl. Rush
Limbaugh)
14. What is Critical Thinking?
Critical Thinking is the ability to:
• Develop a healthy skepticism toward any
information presented as fact
• Apply reasoning and logic to new or unfamiliar
ideas, opinions, and situations.
• See things in an open-minded way and examine
an idea or concept from as many angles as
possible.
• Look past one’s own views of the world and
better understand the opinions of others.
15. What Critical Thinking is NOT?
• Blindly accepting at face value all statements
and arguments made by others
• Blindly trusting political commercials
• Blindly believing TV commercials
• Blindly accepting newspaper stories as fact
• Blindly accepting articles in professional journals
• Blindly accepting all information in textbooks
• Blindly holding on to old beliefs
16. Critical Thinkers
• Distinguish between fact and
opinion
• Ask questions; make detailed
observations; uncover assumptions
and define their terms; and
• Make assertions based on sound
logic and solid evidence.
Ellis, D. Becoming an Master Student, 1997)
17. Benefits of Critical Thinking
Why is critical thinking important to students?
In Personal and Public Life:
• Avoid falling for scams and making foolish
decisions from ignorance
• Make better decision from verified information
• Free one from unexamined assumptions,
dogmas, and prejudices
• Be a better informed citizen and voter
18. Benefits of Critical Thinking
Why is critical thinking important to students?
In the workplace:
• Be a better problem-solver
• Better analyze information and draw appropriate
conclusions
• Communicate a position logically
• Make good decisions (based on data, not
feelings)
19. Barriers to Critical Thinking
Lack of relevant background information
Poor reading skills
Biases
Prejudice
Superstition
Peer Pressure
Resistance to change
Rationalization
Stereotyping
Wishful thinking
Unwarranted assumptions
20. Generic List of Thinking Skills that Would
Be Applicable in Many Situations:
• Recognizing that a problem exists
• Developing an orderly approach so that tasks are
prioritized and problems are recognized as differing
with regard to how serious and urgent they are
• Understanding how cause is determined
• Recognizing and criticizing assumptions
• Analyzing means-goals relationships
• Giving reasons to support a conclusion
• Assessing degrees of likelihood and uncertainty
• Incorporating isolated data into a wider framework
• Using analogies to solve problems
21. What Are the Steps of the Modified
Scientific Method?
1. Make Observations - Ask a Question
2. Propose a Hypothesis
3. Design Experiments to Test the Hypothesis
4. Collect and Analyze Data
5. Accept or Reject the Hypotheses
6. Revise the Hypothesis (Rejected)
or Draw Conclusions (Accepted)
22. Problem Solving Procedure
• Define the problem
• Remove thinking barriers (biases)
• Gather all relevant facts
• Generate solutions (brainstorming, creative
thinking)
• Select a solution (pro’s and con’s) and have a
back up plan
• Implement and evaluate
23. Becoming a Critical Thinker:
IDEALS – 6 Steps to Effective Thinking
1. Identify the problem: What is the real question
we are facing here?
2. Define the context: What are the facts and
circumstances for this problem?
3. Enumerate choices: What are the most plausible
options?
4. Analyze options: What is our best course of
action, all things considered?
5. List reasons explicitly: Why are we making this
particular choice
6. Self-correct: Let’s look at it again. What did we
miss?
25. Teaching Strategies that Promote
Critical Thinking
• Open ended assignments
• Case studies
• Reflections
• Discussions
• C.T. Question of
the week
26. Developing Discussion Questions to
Promote Critical Thinking
Higher-Level Thinking Questions Include:
By Walker, S.E. Active Learning Promotes Critical Thinking
• Open-ended questions that aim at provoking
divergent thinking
• Questions that go beyond knowledge-level recall
• Questions that promote evaluation and synthesis
of facts and concepts
• Questions that start or end with words or
phrases such as “explain,” “compare,” “why”
27. Questions to Ask
• What do you mean by …?
• How did you come to that conclusions?
• What is the source of your information?
• What assumptions led you to that conclusion?
• What are the implications if you are wrong?
• Why did you make that inference? Is another
one more consistent with the data?
• Why is this issue significant?
• What is an alternate explanation for this
phenomenon?
28. Responding to Students’ Discussions
• Ask questions directly related to the student’s
response
• Ask for clarifications, deeper explanations, and
justification
• Solicit opposing views; encourage students to
make a justified argument for or against a topic
• Posting questions that cannot be answered with
a yes or no answer or one-liners
29. Science Case Studies
• National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science
http://sciencecases.lib.buffalo.edu/cs/
• Case studies in science education
http://www.learner.org/resources/series21.html
• Cases online http://www.cse.emory.edu/cases/othercases.cfm
• Case Studies in the Life Sciences
http://www.dcc.ac.uk/projects/life-science-case-studies
• Case Studies in Inclusive Teaching in Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics
http://www.cirtl.net/files/CaseStudiesinInclusiveTeaching.pdf
• Science Case Studies http://www.npl.co.uk/science-
technology/science-case-studies/
32. Critical Thinking and
The Scientific Method
• Designed for my Integrated Science class (SCI 155)
• https://softchalkcloud.com/lesson/serve/GFh2Te
zCkcwdXB/html
33. Sample Exam (SUS 311)
EXAM 2:
You are a research intern to a Congressman who holds a seat on an environmental committee
charged with providing environmental remediation grants to foreign countries. The committee
is to soon consider making a large financial grant to Madagascar; it was specifically requested
to help that country combat its claimed problems of:
• Deforestation,
• Biodiversity, and
• Soil erosion.
You’ve been tasked with investigating if these problems genuinely exist and if they do, to
determine:
• How serious are the problems,
• What are their implications for the future of Madagascar,
• What if any international/global implications exist beyond Madagascar, and
• What actions might be taken to mitigate, and possibly reverse, these problems.
Attached is an environmental report on Madagascar with which to begin your research. Additionally, you
must find and review at least two or more other sources of information regarding Madagascar’s current
environmental issues. From this information you will prepare a briefing report for the Congressman that
is five or more pages long, word processed with 12 point, double-spaced type, and is appropriately
referenced to your research sources. The report will conclude with a few paragraphs containing your opinion
regarding the merit of considering a grant application from Madagascar.
• Deforestation in Madagascar Consequences.pdf
34. COURSERA:
Critical Thinking in Global Challenges
The University of Edinburgh
• Week 1: Essential Concepts in Critical
thinking
• Week 2: Assessing Evidence: Credibility and
Relevance
• Week 3: Assessing Arguments (Part A)
• Week 4: Assessing Arguments (Part B)
• Week 5: Developing your own arguments
35. Critical Thinking in Global Challenges-
The University of Edinburgh
• Obesity
• Climate Change
• Infectious Diseases
• Population
36. Bart College Citizen Science
• A potential course for all students
• https://vimeo.com/91558485
• Citizen Science is an innovative program for all
first-year students at Bard College. Through three
weeks of intensive study during January
intersession, students develop a core
understanding of both the conduct and the
content of science. This foundation allows them
as citizens to grapple with the ever-increasing
number of national and global issues influenced
by science.
37.
38. Perception
We often see and hear what we want to see
and hear, based upon our past experiences,
interests, motives, etc.
43. References
• Critical Thinking: A Necessary Skill in the Age of Spin
http://www.edutopia.org/blog/critical-thinking-necessary-skill-g-randy-kasten
• The State of Critical Thinking Today: The Need for a Substantive
Concept of Critical Thinking – Paul Hurd
http://isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb.topic265890.files/Critical_Thinking_File/10_State_of_
Critical_Thinking.pdf
• WHAT IS CRITICAL THINKING? Jennifer Duncan
http://ctl.utsc.utoronto.ca/twc/sites/default/files/CriticalThinking.pdf
• Strategies for Helping Students Develop Critical Thinking Skills –
Cornell U. CTE
http://www.azwestern.edu/academic_services/instruction/center_teaching_effect/resourc
es/downloads/Helping%20Students%20Develop%20Critical%20Thinking%20Skills%20CTE%
20Cornell%20University.pdf
44. References - Continued
• Critical Thinking on Climate Change: separating
skepticism from denial.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gh9kDCuPuU8
• Time to Bring Pseudoscience into Science
Class!
http://www.realclearscience.com/blog/2014/04/its_time_to_teach_pseud
oscience_in_science_class.html
• Non-Scientific Beliefs Among Undergraduate
Students
http://www.uwo.ca/sci/pdf/NonScientificBeliefsAmongUndergradStudents.pdf
45. References - Continued
• The Critical Thinking Community
http://www.criticalthinking.org
• Association for Informal Logic & Critical Thinking
http://ailact.wordpress.com/
• Critical Thinking Web
http://philosophy.hku.hk/think/
• An Introduction to Critical Thinking
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oefmPtsV_w4
47. What To Do!
• Talk about critical thinking skills (in syllabus &
throughout course)
• Promote critical thinking via techniques
discussed
• Use examples from current global issues
• Using Bloom’s Taxonomy based-testing is not
enough
48. IDEA – 12 Course Objectives
Faculty select 3 – 5 objectives on the Faculty
Information Form (FIF) which best describe the
purpose and content of a particular course. When
responding to the evaluation, students ask
themselves: How well am I developing/progressing
on these objectives?
3. Learning to apply course material to improve
thinking, problem solving, and decisions
49. Go as far as you can see.
When you get there,
you can see farther.
Thomas Carlyle
49