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Critical Thinking

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Introduction Iconic American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash recalled in song a boyhood experience of watching his parents monitor flood conditions at their 1937 Dyess, Arkansas, home by counting the number of front steps the water had risen; 1 step = 1 foot (0.305 m): How high’s the water, mama? Five feet high and risin’ In introducing […]

Introduction

Iconic American singer-songwriter Johnny Cash recalled in song a boyhood experience of watching his parents monitor flood conditions at their 1937 Dyess, Arkansas, home by counting the number of front steps the water had risen; 1 step = 1 foot (0.305 m):

How high’s the water, mama?

Five feet high and risin’

In introducing his 1959 Columbia release, Five Feet High and Risin’, Cash noted (AZLyrics, 2000-2015):

My mama always taught me that good things come from adversity if we put our faith in the Lord.

We couldn’t see much good in the flood waters when they were causing us to have to leave home,

But when the water went down, we found that it had washed a load of rich black bottom dirt across our land.

The following year we had the best cotton crop we’d ever had.

Author/s:

Susan Adler (University of Missouri-Kansas City) Keywords Geography History Social Studies Junior College Secondary School Primary School Critical Thinking Teaching Dewey I started teaching long ago.  The air was full of new ideas about curriculum and teaching methods.  In the United States and the United Kingdom we had the “New Social Studies,” “New Math,” exciting hands-on […]

Susan Adler (University of Missouri-Kansas City)

Keywords
Geography
History
Social Studies
Junior College
Secondary School
Primary School
Critical Thinking
Teaching
Dewey

I started teaching long ago.  The air was full of new ideas about curriculum and teaching methods.  In the United States and the United Kingdom we had the “New Social Studies,” “New Math,” exciting hands-on science projects, and the like.  It was all about engaging learners in the “methods of the discipline,” in doing inquiry not just memorizing facts.  This was a long time ago. Today we are hearing these old “new” ideas again.

In fact, we have been hearing for some years now that we have to do school differently; that teaching for the 21st century cannot be the same as it was back in the old days (i.e. the 20th century).  The Singapore Teachers’ Growth Model (TGM) recognizes that teachers need to be equipped with the relevant 21st century knowledge and skills so that they are better able to develop students holistically.  Education in the past, we are told, focused, more or less, on memorizing a lot of information – learning and digesting a lot of facts.  Today, we must think of education, the development of young minds more broadly, to include problem solving and creativity.

These changes in focus have come about because of the changing social and economic environment.  Critics of the “old” education point to:

  • A “knowledge explosion” – what you learn now won’t hold for the rest of your life; we must be life-long learners.
  • The idea that today information is at our finger tips – there is no need to simply remember information when it is so easily retrieved.
  • A communication explosion which means we must be able to filter what we read and hear. How do we make sense of it?
  • Related to this is our interconnected world – we hear news about the world far more quickly than we ever did.  And people use that connectivity to make news.  Consider the kidnapped girls in Nigeria. Without Twitter the world might not have been concerned, at least not for very long.
  • Of course there are the demands of the economy – the post industrial age needs workers who are flexible, who are life-long learners, who are problem solvers and creative thinkers.

It’s a new world.  Consider the movie Her. The protagonist falls in love with his operating system. And it isn’t absurd!  Movies aside, young people today must deal with a world unlike the one I started teaching in; very unlike the one that existed when public schooling, schooling for everyone, began to be the norm.  Once, you could get a few years of schooling, go out and get a job, raise a family, lead a good, productive life.  But today, if you do not continue to learn, you lose.

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Avner Segall (Michigan State University) Keywords History Secondary School Critical Thinking History Textbooks Reading pedagogy into historical texts Such a focus in history education is important because, as we also know, history and the past are not one and the same. Rather, history, as Seixas (1993) explains “is only a discourse about the past, a story […]

Avner Segall (Michigan State University)

Keywords
History
Secondary School
Critical Thinking
History Textbooks

Reading pedagogy into historical texts
Such a focus in history education is important because, as we also know, history and the past are not one and the same. Rather, history, as Seixas (1993) explains “is only a discourse about the past, a story constructed to make meaning for us in the present” (p. 307; see also Berkhofer, 1995; Jenkins, 1991). Writing the past inevitably involves a deliberate process of “selection, ordering, and evaluation of past events, experiences, and processes” (Kaye, 1991, p. 71). Meanings given to the past are never objective or neutral; they are always interpretations that advance some assumptions, perspectives, and worldviews rather than others. Consequently, scholars exploring such issues invite historians, as well as those who teach and study history, “to consider history as a literary form, on a par with, or at any rate exhibiting affinities to, other kinds of imaginative writing – narrative or descriptive, comic or realist, as the case may be” (Samuel, 1992, pp. 220–21. cf. Jenkins, 1995, p. 36. See also White, 1978).

While the idea that history and the past are not identical may not come as news to some (hopefully, to most), such understandings carry with them a variety of implications, both for how we encourage students to read history and also, and importantly, for the kind of readings teachers ought to conduct in preparation for their pedagogical encounters with students. For what such understandings imply is that historical texts are not only sources of content upon which to base a teacher’s pedagogy. Rather, this understanding signals that historical texts already embody assumptions, perspectives, and worldviews folded into the very process of narrating the past. As such, history textbooks and primary/secondary sources should not be seen simply as teaching students pure content about a topic but as pedagogical invitations for learning – positioning the students to explore that topic, and the world more broadly, in particular ways. In other words, content doesn’t only teach us something, it also, and unavoidably, teaches us how to think and what to think about and value when we engage that content. Some of this “teaching,” as we will see, is implicit and, at times, can run contrary to or subvert the very ideas the text might intend to convey.

Let me elaborate on the idea that historical (any) texts already embody pedagogical invitations for learning. In doing so, I will explore both the notions of content and pedagogy and then move to provide some questions that might help guide your own exploration of the pedagogical nature of curricular content. To foreground this discussion, let’s use an example from Todd & Curti’s textbook, The American Nation (Boyer, 1995), a commonly-used U.S. social studies textbook, that provides this boxed-in paragraph titled “Multicultural perspectives” on the left margin of a page in its chapter, “American Expansionism”:

Native American women who worked in the fur trade often married non-Indian fur traders and played important roles in their societies as a result. For example, Huntkah-itawin, a Sioux woman, married trader James Bordeaux. She helped Bordeaux cement his trading ties with the Sioux, and her access to trade goods helped her brother rise to the position of chief. (p. 318)

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Brooks, Clare (Institute of Education, London) Keywords Geography Secondary School Critical Thinking Critical Thinking in Geography Education Critical thinking is a term that has a great deal of popular appeal with many governments, and can be found in several education policy documents around the globe. However a quick internet and literature search reveals that there is […]

Critical Thinking in Geography Education

Critical thinking is a term that has a great deal of popular appeal with many governments, and can be found in several education policy documents around the globe. However a quick internet and literature search reveals that there is little consensus over what critical thinking means.  To illustrate this point, Figure 1 includes a range of definitions of critical thinking. The reader may wish to consider how their own understanding of critical thinking corresponds with these definitions, and indeed what they consider to be the common or core components of critical thinking?

Table 1. Definitions of critical thinking

“Critical thinking is the process of thinking that questions assumptions.” 

~ Brookfield, S.D. (2000). “Contesting criticality: Epistemological and practical contradictions in critical reflection” in Proceedings of the 41st Annual Adult Education Research Conference.

Critical thinking has also been described as:

“thinking about thinking.”

~ Raiskums, B.W., (2008). An Analysis of the Concept Criticality in Adult Education.

 “reasonable reflective thinking focused on deciding what to believe or do.” 

~ Ennis, R.H., (2003). “Critical Thinking Assessment” in Fasko, Critical Thinking and Reasoning: Current Research, Theory, and PracticeISBN 978-1-57273-460-9

“the intellectually disciplined process of actively and skillfully conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, synthesizing, and/or evaluating information gathered from, or generated by, observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or communication, as a guide to belief and action”.  

~ Scriven, M., and Paul, R.W., (1987). Critical Thinking as Defined by the National Council for Excellence in Critical Thinking

“the process of purposeful, self-regulatory judgment, which uses reasoned consideration to evidence, context, conceptualizations, methods, and criteria.” 

~ Facione, Peter A. Critical Thinking: What It is and Why It Counts, Insightassessment.com

“Within the critical social theory philosophical frame, critical thinking is commonly understood to involve commitment to the social and political practice of participatory democracy, willingness to imagine or remain open to considering alternative perspectives, willingness to integrate new or revised perspectives into our ways of thinking and acting, and willingness to foster criticality in others.”

~ Raiskums, B.W., (2008). An Analysis of the Concept Criticality in Adult Education.

Critical thinkers demonstrate:

  • Rationality – rely on reason rather than emotion
  • Self-awareness – weigh the influences of motives and bias
  • Honesty – recognise emotional impulses, selfish motives, nefarious purposes or other modes of self-deception
  • Open-mindedness – consider a variety of possible viewpoints or perspectives
  • Discipline – avoid snap judgments
  • Judgement – recognise the relevance of alternative perspectives

From: CriticalReading.com

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