Critical Thinking Corner Welcome

Post on 03-Feb-2015

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This presentation is designed to welcome visitors to the STUDYSmarter Critical Thinking Corner. It includes an overview of strategies for critical thinking, reading and writing at university.

Transcript of Critical Thinking Corner Welcome

Critical Thinking Corner

Welcome!

Overview

1. What is critical thinking?2. Developing skills

What is critical

thinking?

Critical thinking is an approach to knowledge that focuses on how and why ideas ‘make sense.’

1. What is critical thinking?

It includes

• Reading actively

• Writing to think (rather than simply to record)

• Being aware of your response to ideas

• Making connections between ideas, texts, and contexts

• Maintaining a position of scepticism or doubt

• Produce rigorous scholarship• Think and write with purpose• Make wise choices – in your

writing and in your life!• Mature as a thinker• Develop your voice

1. Why think critically?

Critical thinkers can:

This leads to a sense of achievement!

So let’s put it into practice…

1. Practical activity

What is happening in this photograph?

Try to imagine and account for:

• what is on the board

• what is happening

• where this is located

• when the picture was taken

• who/what is left out

1. What did you notice?

Did you notice …

There are far more women than men…

The men are using their hands the most…

Only one person appears to address the camera…

A fairly ordinary classroom photo … or is it?

These questions are original and innovative:• “Team Work: Does gender make a difference?”• “Team Teaching: A good model for team work?”

1. Investigate original questions

Critical thinkers go beyond what is ‘obvious’ and are able to:

1. Account for ideas

2. Imagine alternatives

3. Show new directions for exploration

1. Reasons to ask new questions

Asking new, innovative questions is often more valuable than having all the answers!

1. Be sceptical about ‘the facts’

Because critical thinkers consider HOW and WHY ideas make sense, what is written on the page is more like a starting point than a simple ‘fact.’

What is written in your readings or said in lectures

is a springboard for your thinking!

Critical thinking is a skill and attitude developed and honed over a long period of time.

It is not easy. But, it is worthwhile…

1. A note to remember

Developing skills

You often know more than you think you know.

2. Consider your prior knowledge When researching consider:

• If you have studied similar sources

• Whether you have read an author’s other works

• How you did this before

• What your tutor/professor suggested

• When you might use an idea or concept

• Why you chose this reading / research topic

• What is your purpose in reading/viewing a particular source?

• How does it relate to your project? • What if a different methodology was

used?• Where was it published?• Have you seen similar works before?

2. Question

Good questions usually begin with:

WHAT…

WHERE…

WHEN…

WHY…

HOW…

Logical

Rational

Substantiated

2. Evaluate claims

Recent?

Reputable?

Replicable?

2. Understand context

• When was it written?• Who published it?• Who else has cited it in their work? Recently?• Are the ideas and findings valid? Why?• Is the methodology current?• What values and attitudes were current at its time and place of publication?• What implicit values and assumptions does it contain?

When reading new sources, these questions will help with critical evaluation:

Assumptions are often:

2. Identify assumptions

Yours and those in your field

- Cultural- Disciplinary- Contextual

Consider:

Why might an author emphasise one idea over another?

2. Search for bias

Detecting bias is not an academic game of ‘gotcha.’ It is genuine enquiry into the various convictions of relevant authors in your field.

• How many times does a source repeat key words or ideas?

• Is there more theory than application? A lot of data?

• What do authorial choices communicate?

2. Take inventory

A good time to start critical thinking is when reading.

• What was your initial response to an idea? Can you account for it?

• What compels you in a text? What doesn’t? Why?

• Have you ever read a text and thought, ‘No, you’re wrong!’ or, ‘I wouldn’t do it that way,’ or, ‘What if …?’

2. Reflect and consider

Reflecting on your response is a crucial part of critical engagement with texts and ideas.

A note to remember:

Don’t allow your sources to ‘speak for you’. Use voice to show your thinking.

2. Use voice

Your ideas, readings, and arguments are like pieces of a puzzle that fit together in your writing. How do you account for each piece and its place in the puzzle?

Your voice explains the links!

2. Do I have to read everything?

There is a lot of literature being published all the time – it would be impossible to read all of it, or even a lot of it!

The fact is …

The truth is …

Awareness of your thinking and interpretation is crucial to good scholarship. Writing is a process of thinking, so write early and often. This helps you offer new, rigorous arguments and ideas.

2. A note to remember

Critical thinking skills are developed and honed over a long period of time.

Welcome your ‘slip-ups’ or mistakes: they are tools that will help you learn and understand more!

5. WEBCT

GO TO IT!

4. LECTOPIA

2. NOTE-MAKING

1. READING AND RESEARCH

3. VOICE

The STUDYSmarter Critical Thinking Corner offers you skills and strategies for excellent critical thinking in the following areas. It is your site to explore, learn, and return to when you need it.