How To Teach Students To Think Critically
How To Teach Students To Think Critically
How To Teach Students To Think Critically
All first year students at the University of Technology Sydney could soon be required to take
a compulsory maths course in an attempt to give them some numerical thinking skills.
The new course would be an elective next year and mandatory in 2016 with the universitys
deputy vice-chancellor for education and students Shirley Alexander saying the aim is to give
students some maths critical thinking skills.
Most tertiary institutions have listed among their graduate attributes the ability to think
critically. This seems a desirable outcome, but what exactly does it mean to think critically
and how do you get students to do it?
The problem is that critical thinking is the Cheshire Cat of educational curricula it is hinted
at in all disciplines but appears fully formed in none. As soon as you push to see it in focus, it
slips away.
If you ask curriculum designers exactly how critical thinking skills are developed, the answers
are often vague and unhelpful for those wanting to teach it.
This is partly because of a lack of clarity about the term itself and because there are some who
believe that critical thinking cannot be taught in isolation, that it can only be developed in a
discipline context after all, you have think critically about something.
So what should any mandatory first year course in critical thinking look like? There is no
single answer to that, but let me suggest a structure with four key areas:
1. argumentation
2. logic
3. psychology
I will then explain that these four areas are bound together by a common language of thinking
and a set of critical thinking values.
1. Argumentation
The most powerful framework for learning to think well in a manner that is transferable
across contexts is argumentation.
Arguments have premises, those things that we take to be true for the purposes of the
argument, and conclusions or end points that are arrived at by inferring from the premises.
Understanding this structure allows us to analyse the strength of an argument by assessing the
likelihood that the premises are true or by examining how the conclusion follows from them.
Arguments in which the conclusion follows logically from the premises are said to be valid.
Valid arguments with true premises are called sound. The definitions of invalid and unsound
follow.
This gives us a language with which to frame our position and the basic structure of why it
seems justified.
2. Logic
Logic is fundamental to rationality. It is difficult to see how you could value critical thinking
without also embracing logic.
People generally speak of formal logic basically the logic of deduction and informal logic
also called induction.
Deduction is most of what goes on in mathematics or Suduko puzzles and induction is usually
about generalising or analogising and is integral to the processes of science.
Using logic in a flawed way leads to the committing of the fallacies of reasoning, which
famously contain such logical errors as circular reasoning, the false cause fallacy or appeal to
popular opinion. Learning about this cognitive landscape is central to the development of
effective thinking.
3. Psychology
The messy business of our psychology how our minds actuality work is another necessary
component of a solid critical thinking course.
One of the great insights of psychology over the past few decades is the realisation that
thinking is not so much something we do, as something that happens to us. We are not as in
control of our decision-making as we think we are.
We are masses of cognitive biases as much as we are rational beings. This does not mean we
are flawed, it just means we dont think in the nice, linear way that educators often like to
think we do.
How we arrive at conclusions, form beliefs and process information is very organic and
idiosyncratic. We are not just clinical truth-seeking reasoning machines.
Our thinking is also about our prior beliefs, our values, our biases and our desires.
It is useful to equip students with some understanding of the general tools of evaluating
information that have become ubiquitous in our society. Two that come to mind are the nature
of science and statistics.
Learning about what the differences are between hypotheses, theories and laws, for example,
can help people understand why science has credibility without having to teach them what a
molecule is, or about Newtons laws of motion.
Understanding some basic statistics also goes a long way to making students feel more
empowered to tackle difficult or complex issues. Its not about mastering the content, but
about understanding the process.
Embedded within all of this is the language of our thinking. The cognitive skills such as
inferring, analysing, evaluating, justifying, categorising and decoding are all the things that
we do with knowledge.
If we can talk to students using these terms, with a full understanding of what they mean and
how they are used, then teaching thinking becomes like teaching a physical process such as a
sport, in which each element can be identified, polished, refined and optimised.
In much the same way that a javelin coach can freeze a video and talk to an athlete about their
foot positioning or centre of balance, a teacher of critical thinking can use the language of
cognition to interrogate a students thinking in high resolution.
All of these potential aspects of a critical thinking course can be taught outside any discipline
context. General knowledge, topical issues and media provide a mountain of grist for the
cognitive mill.
General concepts of argumentation and logic are readily transferable between contexts once
students are taught to recognise the deeper structures inherent in these fields and to apply
them across a variety of situations.
Values
Its worth understanding too that a good critical thinking education is also an education in
values.
Not all values are ethical in nature. In thinking well we value precision, coherence, simplicity
of expression, logical structure, clarity, perseverance, honesty in representation and any
number of like qualities. If schools are to teach values, why not teach the values of effective
thinking?
So, lets not assume that students will learn to think critically just by learning the
methodology of their subjects. Sure it will help, but its not an explicit treatment of thinking
and is therefore less transferable.
A course that targets effective thinking need not detract from other subjects in fact it should
enhance performance across the board.
But ideally, such a course should not be needed if teachers of all subjects focused on the
thinking of their students as well as the content they have to cover.