This document summarizes the findings of a research project on teacher education and critical thinking in EFL teaching. The research had two stages: a documentary review of 179 academic sources, and qualitative surveys with 137 EFL teachers. Key findings from the documentary review included the importance of developing cognitive skills, critical reading strategies, using various teaching strategies, and promoting different types of writing. Survey results showed teachers viewed critical thinking as developing higher-order thinking skills and saw value in learner-centered activities. The conclusion is that EFL teacher education programs should adopt progressive pedagogies to help teachers develop knowledge, skills, and attitudes to be lifelong learners and agents of social change.
Integrating Teacher Education and Critical Thinking in ELT
1. 3rd International Symposium on
Research in Foreign Language Teaching:
Alternatives in English Language
Teaching to New Realities
Teacher education and
critical thinking:
Systematizing
theoretical perspectives
and formative
experiences in ELT
Yamith José Fandiño
Parra
M.A. in Teaching
Doctoral student in
Education and Society
7. 1. Research in teacher education
Lately, policies and diagnoses place teacher education at the center of improving and
transforming educational systems.
A growing interest in the education of both pre-service and in-service teachers
A technical view on teacher education
Teachers as objects of change, not as
subjects of change (Torres, 2000).
Ministries of education
An instrumental view on teacher
education
A way to show teachers procedures on
what and how to do things (Vieira &
Mora, 2008).
Faculties of education
8. 1. Research in teacher education
Educational agendas and institutional plans center on teachers as agents.
Reflective and critical approaches
The development of comprehension and
analysis as the basis for continuous
improvement (Hargreaves, 1999).
The teaching profession
Intellectual and mental processes to
conceptualize, analyze, and evaluate
information actively and skillfully
(Miranda, 2003).
Teacher cognition
9. Within this context, this paper reports on the findings of a research project carried out
by a group of EFL teacher educators at La Salle University.
Objectives
(a) Describe patterns and trends present in published academic sources
(b) Identify teachers’ perspectives and strategies present in classroom experiences.
Question
What theoretical perspectives and form
ative experiences substantiate the inte
gration of teacher education and critical
thinking?
11. 2. Teacher education
C B
A
Educational programs as spaces and
opportunities to reflect both on practice
and on topics of interest related to
better learning (La Salle, 2010).
Lasallian perspective
Teachers as legitimate actors capable
of personal self-revelation,
professional reflection and community
growth (Díaz-Maggioli, 2004).
Critical perspective
Teachers as simple technicians that reiterate
knowledge elaborated by others (Rosemberg,
2011).
Traditional perspective
12. 2. Critical thinking
01 Processes and
strategies to solve
problems, make
decisions, and learn
new concepts.
Sternberg (1986)
03 Capacities and attitudes
needed in academic life
as well as everyday life.
Boisvert (2004)
02 A complex cognitive
process to judge, use
opinions, and take
decisions.
Enis (2001)
04 A competence in life
related to intentional
self-regulated judgment.
Facione (2007)
Most of the jobs and occupations involve tracking, processing, and
analyzing information from different sources and in different
modalities. It is important to acquire and develop critical thinking
(Elder and Paul, 2008).
The information and knowledge society
14. 3. Methodological framework
Carr & Kemmis (1986)
Interpret the world as it is from
(inter) subjective experiences of
individuals. It uses meaning
oriented methodologies.
Denzin & Lincoln (2003)
Understand the meanings and
senses of the everyday life of
groups of people in their natural
settings.
Bradshaw et al. (2017)
Define the perspectives and
worldviews of the people
involved in a phenomenon or
process.
17. 3. Stage 2: Qualitative surveys
It was designed and
piloted with the
collaboration of fellow
professors from the
School of Education
Sciences. Once
validated, the survey
was made up of a set of
34 questions.
Online survey
211 subjects replied
positively to an open
call to participate in
this stage following a
purposive sampling
method. Due to
personal or work
circumstances, 74 of
them quit. The
remaining 137
comprised our sample.
Sample
Education: Undergraduate (29),
specialization (11), master’s degree
(78), Ph.D. degree (13) and other (6).
Workplace: Teachers in public and
private schools and universities in
Colombia (54%), Venezuela (39%),
Chile (4%), and México, Aruba, and
Brazil (1%).
Criteria such as gender, age, and race
were not included as they may have
brought about biases.
Characteristics
A first set of questions
regarding a series of
perspectives related to
critical thinking.
A second set of
questions about the
methods and strategies
implemented to promote
critical thinking
Processing
19. 4. Results from stage 1
(1) The differentiated or
complementary teaching of
basic and complex cognitive
skills and (2) the work with
specific skills for disciplinary
areas and the work with
generic skills among different
disciplines.
Mental skills
(1) Diagnoses of reading levels and assessment
of reading skills, (2) work with critical reading
through inferences, analogies, and
recontextualizations, and (3) development of
metacognition over attitudes.
Reading
(1) Use of co-instructional strategies such as
alternate questions, graphic organizers, analogies,
concept maps, and textual structures, (2) work with
different types of texts such as literary texts,
journalistic texts, and academic texts, and (3) the
importance of decision making for social
transformation in the development of critical thinking.
Teaching strategies
(1) Diagnoses of the levels of
learners’ textual production, (2)
elaboration of different types of
texts; concretely, informative,
expository, and argumentative, and
(3) inclusion of problem solving in
writing tasks.
Writing
01 02
03 04
20. 4. Results from stage 2
Work with critical thinking and teacher education allows developing the sociocultural
dimensions as well as the empowerment of pre-service and in-service teachers // An
interest in self-authoring or co-creative learning: enabling people to examine themselves
and their culture to take responsibility for their development.
Teachers’ perspectives
Focus on higher order thinking skills
(HOTS), such as analyzing, creating
alternatives, and solving problems =
Intellectual freedom and making sense
of the world.
Teachers’ strategies
Learner-centeredness, active
engagement, and reflective life-long
learning.
Workshops, German seminars, forums,
student-led presentations, exchange of
opinions, and assessment of points of
view.
Classroom activities and techniques
22. 5. EFL teacher education and
critical thinking
Progressive pedagogies in EFL
teacher education:
Interdisciplinary, integrated, and
inquiry-based perspectives to
prepare students for lifelong
learning and civic engagement.
Webber and Miller (2016)Prepare EFL teachers to be become agents of social
change, capable of moving towards action through
systematic work with meta-perspectives:
• meta-cognition (thinking about thinking),
• meta-knowledge (knowledge about the nature and
limitations of knowledge),
• meta-learning (learning how to learn), and
• meta-dialog (dialog about how we engage in
interactions).
Metacognition and innovation
Allow EFL teachers to challenge misjudgments and reconstruct their
mental models through workshops, German seminars, projects,
problems, and inquiry-based learning.
A new repertoire of knowledge, skills, and attitudes
Encourage EFL teachers explore and enact new theories of learning,
alternative pedagogical theories, and innovative knowledge creation modalities.
New approaches to teacher education
23. 5. EFL teachers as critical thinkers
Both theoretical knowledge and practical knowledge suggest that the co-joint work with
teacher education and critical thinking enables the acquisition and development of
knowledge, skills and attitudes needed for professional and everyday life.
It is important that EFL teacher education programs “develop critical thinking skills which
go beyond intellectual brilliance and capacity to embrace leadership, companionship,
courage, creativity, perseverance, discipline, freedom, honesty, maturity, integrity,
autonomy, transformation, discernment, and empathy” (Uribe et al., p. 85).
Uribe et al. (2017)
24. 5. Critical thinking EFL teachers
CRITICAL THINKING AND ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING PT. 1
https://www.eflmagazine.com/critical-thinking-english-language-teaching/
CRITICAL THINKING AND ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING PT. 2
https://www.eflmagazine.com/critical-thinking-english-language-teaching-pt-2/
10 GREAT CRITICAL THINKING ACTIVITES THAT ENGAGE STUDENTS
https://wabisabilearning.com/blogs/critical-thinking/10-great-critical-thinking-activities-that-
engage-your-students
CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS
https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/blogs/ninamk/critical-thinking-skills
INCORPORATING CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS DEVELOPMENT INTO ESL/EFL COURSES
http://iteslj.org/Techniques/Halvorsen-CriticalThinking.html
25. References
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Qualitative Nursing Research, 4(1), 1-8. doi.org/10.1177/2333393617742282
Carr, W. & Kemmis, S. (1986). Becoming critical: Education, knowledge, and action research. Falmer Press
Denzin, N. y Lincoln, Y. (2003). The landscape of qualitative research. Theories and issues. Sage. Díaz-Maggioli, G. (2004).
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Ennis, R. H. (2001). Critical Thinking assessment. Theory into Practice, 2(2), 179-186.
Facione, P. A. (2007). Pensamiento Crítico: ¿Qué es y por qué es importante? https://bit.ly/2ORpa3y
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education, 51(3), 1061-1080.
26. Thank you
Yamith José Fandiño
E-mails: yfandino@unisalle.edu.co; teacheryamith@gmail.com
ORCID: 0000-0002-5567-5465