1. Critical Thinking in Education
Integrating Critical Thinking
Into Learning Activities Across the
Curriculum
Eric Rusten & Susan Schuman – USAID/PAEM & MoE
2. Critical Thinking Activities
Critical Thinking in Language Learning
Critical Thinking in Math – Topology
Critical Thinking in Science – How do
planes, birds and insects fly?
4. Defining Critical Thinking
Some Attributes of a Critical Thinker:
Curiosity Problem solver Evaluates statements
Asking
& arguments
pertinent
Seeks new Actively
questions Willing to examine beliefs,
solutions shares new
knowledge assumptions & opinions
Admits a lack of
knowledge & Distinguishes Sees critical thinking as a life-
understanding between facts long process of self-assessment
and opinion
Seeks proof Reflective Open to changing
ones mind
Seeks evidence to support
Accepts others beliefs Waits till all facts
assumptions and beliefs
and opinions before making
Seeks clarity and exactness judgments
Actively enjoys
Careful and active observer learning Humility
7. Defining Critical Thinking &
Describing Critical Thinkers
“Critical thinking is the disciplined mental activity of evaluating
arguments [information] or propositions and making judgments
that can guide the development of beliefs and taking action.”
Ennis (1992)
Critical thinking is both a frame of mind and a set of mental
capabilities.
“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 a Master Student, 1997
8. Perspectives on Critical Thinking
Critical thinking is based on concepts and
principles, not on hard and fast, or step-by-
step, procedures.
Critical thinking does not assure that one
will reach either the truth or correct
conclusions.
Circuital thinking is a continuous process
and often doesn’t lead to a final conclusion.
Critical thinking is hard intellectual work
Critical thinking is an intellectual skill that
can (must) be learned and improved
9. Data >> Wisdom Chain
Data > Information > Knowledge > Wisdom
10. Perspectives on Learning
All reasoning/thinking/learning:
starts and progresses with questions and a
need to understand;
occurs within points of view and frames of
reference;
proceeds from some goals and objectives,
has an informational base;
uses data/information that must be
interpreted and this interpretation involves
concepts, values, assumptions, past
knowledge, inferences, biases, etc.
11. Critical Thinking, Creative Thinking,
Problem Solving, Scientific Thinking,….
Critical Thinking
Creative Thinking
Scientific Thinking & Process
Problem Solving
Decision Making
12. Map of Thinking Domains
Scientific Thinking Creative Thinking Critical Thinking
•Understanding/theory •Original Product •Critical judgment
•Hypothesis •Create Possibilities •Assessing information
•Experiment(s) •Create Metaphors •Inference-using evidence
•Observations •Testing •Deduction-if…then
•Conclusion(s) •Refining •New or refined perspective
Decision Making Problem Solving
•Well-founded decision •Best solution
•Consider options •Consider options
•Predict consequences •Evaluate consequences
•Select best option
•Choose best solution
14. Problem Solving
Suspend a 500 franc coin over water in a
glass using a 1000 Franc note.
What is the problem? (Parse into sub-problems)
What do you know?
What resources do you have and what can I do with
them?
What constraints do you face?
What are some possible solutions? (brain storming)
Evaluating possible solutions.
Selecting best bets.
Testing best-bet solutions.
Assessing results.
Refining solutions.
Proposing final solution.
15. Why is Critical Thinking Important?
To learn is to think.
To think poorly is to learn poorly.
To think well is to learn well.
All content, to be learned, must be
intellectually constructed.
Memorizing IS NOT learning.
16. Why Critical Thinking is Important
Underlies reading, writing, speaking, and listening . . .
the basic elements of communication, learning and
education
Plays an important role in social change
Helps us uncover bias and prejudice
Is a path to freedom form half-truths, prejudice and
deceptions
Creates the willingness to change one point of view as
we continue to examine and re-examine ideas that may
seem obvious.
Takes time and the willingness to say three essential
words: I don't know.
Enables us to distinguish between fact and opinion, ask
good questions, make detailed observations, uncover
assumptions and define their terms, and make
assertions based on sound logic and solid evidence
17. Why Critical Thinking is Important
“The future now belongs to societies
that organize themselves for learning...
nations that want high incomes and full
employment must develop policies that
emphasize the acquisition of knowledge
and [thinking] skills by everyone, not
just a select few.”
Ray Marshall & Marc Tucker, Thinking For A Living: Education And The
Wealth of Nations, Basic Books. New York. 1992.
18. Questions & Critical Thinking
What do you mean by_______________?
How did you come to that conclusion?
What was said in the text?
What is the source of your information?
What is the source of information in the document?
What assumption led you to that conclusion?
Suppose you are wrong. What are the implications?
Why did you make that inference? Is another one
more consistent with the data?
Why is this issue significant?
How do I know that what you are saying is true?
What is an alternate explanation for this
phenomenon?
19. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
CATS (Classroom Assessment
Techniques): use of ongoing classroom
assessment and reflection to monitor and
facilitate students' critical thinking.
Ask students to write a "Minute Paper"
responding to specific questions such as:
What was the most important thing you learned
in today's class?
What one question related to this lesson remains
uppermost in your mind?
How is what you learned today relevant to other
classes or life outside of school?
20. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
Cooperative Learning: putting
students in structured group learning
situations (2 or more learners) is an
excellent way to foster critical thinking.
In cooperative learning environments,
learners engage in active, critical thinking
with continuous support and feedback from
peers and the learning facilitator
21. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
Use Questions: Learning to formulate a series of
quality questions is key to critical thinking and
becoming a good critical thinker:
Reciprocal Peer Questioning: Following a lesson,
present a list of question stems to guide students in
writing responses in small groups. Then, the whole
class discusses some of the questions from some or
all of the small groups.
Reader's Questions: Require learners to write
questions on assigned reading and turn them in at
the beginning of class. Select a few of the questions
as the impetus for class discussion.
Blue Sky Questions:
Extended Learning Questions:
Learners’ exam questions:
Blooms taxonomy questions:
22. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
Writing Assignments: writing for others
demands that learners think clearly to
communicate clearly.
can be based on questions
can be done in small groups or individually
can use different structures: compare & contrast,
cause & effect, explanation, argument, persuasion,
etc.
Letter to the editors (teams of learners become
editors at different news papers and readers)
Lab / experimental reports
23. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
Dialogues/Debates: stimulates useful discussions in
the classroom:
Written dialogues: Small groups of learners analyze written
dialogues (plays, news paper articles, etc.) and identify
different viewpoints in the dialogue, look for biases,
presence or exclusion of important evidence, alternative
interpretations, misstatement of facts, and errors in
reasoning. Each group decides which view is the most
reasonable and must defend this position. After coming to a
conclusion, each group acts out their dialogue and explains
their analysis of it.
Spontaneous Group Dialogue/Debate: Students in one
group are assigned roles (often what they don’t believe in)
to play in a discussion (such as leader, information giver,
opinion seeker, and disagreer). Observer groups must
determine what roles are being played by whom,
identifying biases and errors in thinking, evaluating
reasoning skills, and examining ethical implications of the
content.
24. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
Experiments and Collecting Data
(critical thinking in science & math)
Discovering relationships in math and
science – pie ∏; prime numbers; area
and volume calculations; geometry;
temperature and color; height, arm span
and head size; genetics; flight and air
pressure; etc.
Statistics and presenting information
25. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
Ambiguity: Rather than provide all
the information as fact, produce as
much ambiguity in the classroom as
possible.
Don't give students clear cut material.
Give them conflicting information that
they must think their way through.
Present content as a detective story that
they must solve by answering a set of
questions.
26. Enabling Learners to Become
Quality Critical Thinkers
IDEALS -- Six Steps to Effective Thinking
Identify the problem. — “What’s the real question
we’re facing here?”
Define the context. — “What are the facts and
circumstances that frame this problem?”
Enumerate choices. — “What are our most plausible
three or four options?”
Analyze options. — “What is our best course of action,
all things considered?”
List reasons explicitly. — “Let’s be clear: Why we are
making this particular choice?”
Self-correct. — “Okay, let’s look at it again. What did
we miss?”
27. Critical Thinking In The Curriculum
Earth & Life Sciences
Physics/Chemistry
Math
Geography/History
How does rainfall influence agriculture,
history, settlements, economics,
education, politics
French (grammar & literature)
Second languages
28. Participant Activities:
Teams of two
Prepare a 20 min. micro-learning
activity that integrates elements of
critical thinking
29. Suggested Planning Template
A thinking activity plan would include:
Activity title and summary statement
Discipline/subject(s); Grade level(s)
Goals, objectives & learning outcomes
Methods and Materials
Resource needs (including time)
Thinking skills emphasized
Learning strategies
Critical questions
Activity/Lesson
Assessing learners (teacher, peer & self)
Extending activity beyond the classroom