Title: Teaching Critical Thinking in Medical Education
1Teaching Critical Thinking in Medical Education
- John Epling, MD, MSEd
- SUNY-Upstate Medical University
- Tiffany A. Koszalka, PhD
- Syracuse University
2Before we start...
- Let's think about our teaching...
- What types of teaching strategies do you use?
- How well do these strategies actively engage your
students? - What type of thinking and learning responses do
these strategies evoke in your students? - Please take a few minutes to record your
responses to these questions on page 1 of the
session handout
3Today
- Critical thinking definitions and dimensions
- Critical thinking in medical education
- Technology and teaching critical thinking
- Examples of critical thinking activities
- Discussion on integrating critical thinking
activities - Summary
4What is critical thinking?
- How do you define critical thinking?
- Please take a few minutes to record your response
on the bottom of page 1 of the session handout
5What is critical thinking?
- 70's/80's reaction to reproductive learning
- Ennis ('89) reflective thinking focused on
deciding what to believe or do - Paul ('92) question, goal, point of view,
assumptions, central concepts, principles/theories
, data, reasoning, consequences
6What is critical thinking?
- Dimensions of critical thinking
- Ennis
- logical judges relationships between terms
- critical knows criteria for judging statements
- pragmatic statement good enough for goal
- But there's more...
7What is critical thinking?
- Walters above creativity, imagination,
insight, intuition - Litecky ('92) - the active mental effort to make
meaning of our world by carefully examining
thought in order to better understand content
8What is critical thinking?
- Resnick and Klopfer ('87)
- non-algorithmic
- complex
- yields multiple solutions
- nuanced judgement and interpretation
- multiple criteria
- self-regulation of thinking process
- imposing meaning
- effortful
9What is critical thinking?
- William Graham Sumner (1906)
- ...the examination and test of propositions of
any kind which are offered for acceptance, in
order to find out whether they correspond to
reality or not...It is a mental habit and
power...It is our only guarantee against
delusion, deception, superstition, and
misapprehension of ourselves and our earthly
circumstances.
10What is a critical thinker?
- A well-cultivated critical thinker
- Raises vital questions and problems, formulating
them clearly and precisely - Gathers and assesses relevant information, using
abstract ideas to interpret it effectively - Comes to well-reasoned conclusions and solutions,
testing them against relevant criteria and
standards - Thinks openmindedly within alternative systems of
thought, recognizing and assessing, as need be,
their assumptions, implications, and practical
consequences and - Communicates effectively with others in figuring
out solutions to complex problems. - (from CriticalThinking.org)
11Complex Thinking Process
Content/Basic Thinking accepted
knowledge metacognition
Creative Thinking generated knowledge
Critical Thinking reorganized knowledge
12Is critical thinking different than other
thinking?
- Critical thinking can be seen as having two
components - a set of skills to process and generate
information and beliefs, and - the habit, based on intellectual commitment, of
using those skills to guide behavior. - It is thus to be contrasted with
- the mere acquisition and retention of information
alone, (because it involves a particular way in
which information is sought and treated,) - the mere possession of a set of skills, (because
it involves the continual use of them,) and - the mere use of those skills ("as an exercise")
without acceptance of their results. - From http//www.criticalthinking.
org/University/univclass/Defining.html
13What is the purpose of critical thinking?
- "The purpose of critical thinking is, therefore,
to achieve understanding, evaluate view points,
and solve problems. Since all three areas involve
the asking of questions, we can say that critical
thinking is the questioning or inquiry we engage
in when we seek to understand, evaluate, or
resolve." - Maiorana, Victor P. Critical Thinking
Across the Curriculum Building the Analytical
Classroom. 1992.
14What are the dimensions of critical thinking?35
dimensions of critical thought
- Affect
- Independence, feelings, perspective, intellect,
confidence, etc. - Cognitive Macro abilities
- Generalizing, clarifying, questioning, connecting
- Cognitive Micro skills
- Compare and contrast, infer, predict, distinguish
- See page 2 of session handout .. Review the list
and Circle the dimensions you believe that you
prompt in your students during your teaching
15Activities that prompt critical thinking
- What types of instructional activities do you
think prompt critical thinking?
16Activities that prompt critical thinking
- embedded questions
- simulations
- case studies, problem-based learning
- metacognitive strategies (guided note-taking)
e.g. creating own study guide placing new
knowledge into a 3D model of the 'world' - putting collected data into a personal
'scrapbook' - developing a student portfolio
- selecting and evaluating resources
- creating checklists or evaluation schema
- creating a model
- conducting an interview
- creating an 'expert' lecture
- taking sides, becoming the expert, defending
position - taking a journey through a new environment and
exploring all aspects - working collaboratively to socially negotiate
tasks
17Critical Thinking and Med Ed
- Not much on critical thinking
- more in nursing/health professions lit.
- West, JAMA 20002841105-1110
- concept mapping exercise peds residents
- found expected change in maps pre and post
educational intervention
18Critical Thinking and Med Ed
- Jane Scott
- Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Assessment
- pre-MS1, end-MS3
- CT increased over 2 years.
- could not predict clerkship performance
19Critical Thinking and Med Ed
- Critical Appraisal and Critical Thinking
- Kee, QJM 2004 97609
- argument analysis, logical fallacy
- Simulation-based Med Ed
- Ziv, Medical Teacher 200527(3)193
- learning from mistakes
20Technology and Critical Thinking
- using computers as mindtools
- What types of computer software stimulate
critical thinking?
21Learning with computers (mindtools)
- Learning with computers (mindtools) requires
- Thinking harder about a subject matter domain
- Thinking deeply about the domain
- Engaging in meaningful learning
- Active - manipulative
- Constructive articulative / reflective
- Intentional - purposive
- Authentic complex / contextual
- Collaborative socially negotiated
Mindtools (Computer tools
Active Passive
Teacher/System
Student
Presentation Creation
(From Jonassen, p. 11)
22Common Mindtools and how may they help students
engage in critical thinking
- Databases (Semantic Organizing Tool)
- Concept maps (Semantic Organizing Tool)
- Intentional search tools (Interpretation Tool)
- Visualization tools (Interpretation Tool)
- Spreadsheets (Dynamic Modeling Tool)
- Microworlds / Simulations (Dynamic Modeling Tool)
- Expert Systems (Dynamic Modeling Tool)
- Systems Modeling tools (Dynamic Modeling Tool)
- Presentation/Hypermedia tools (Knowledge
Construction Tool) - Live conversation environments (Social
Collaboration Tool)
23Example 1
- Epidemiology Simulation engages learners in
- Analyzing and recognizing patterns
- Hypothesizing, planning, and predicting
- Identifying causal relationships
- Generating alternatives and evaluating choices
- Elaborating explanations
- Designing and problem solving
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Example 2
- Concept mapping engages learners in
- Connecting, comparing and contrasting information
- Recognizing patterns
- Classifying and sequencing information
- Identifying causal relationships
- Summarizing and visualizing information
- West, Pomeroy, Park, Gerstenberger, Sandoval
(2000, JAMA) Critical thinking in graduate
medical education The role of concept mapping in
assessment
33Example 2First year med students pre-instruction
34Example 2second/third year med students
post-instruction
35Example 3
- EBM WebQuests
- not DOING one...
- CREATING one... engages learners in
- Prioritizing, classifying, verifying, and
assessing information - Identifying main ideas and finding / defining
content sequences - Identifying patterns, organizing information,
describing content - Comparing and contrasting information
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39CT and Med Ed - Ideas
- What do we ALREADY do that promotes critical
thinking? - Use page 3 of the session handout to describe
critical thinking activities that you already use
in 2 or 3 of your teaching areas - And .. think about how can we make teaching and
learning better for medical students through
integration of critical thinking activities
40Commonly used activities that prompt critical
thinking at Upstate
Which do you use and How?
- embedded questions
- simulations
- case studies, problem-based learning
- metacognitive strategies (guided note-taking)
e.g. creating own study guide placing new
knowledge into a 3D model of the 'world' - putting collected data into a personal
'scrapbook' - developing a student portfolio
- selecting and evaluating resources
- creating checklists or evaluation schema
- creating a model
- conducting an interview
- creating an 'expert' lecture
- taking sides, becoming the expert, defending
position - taking a journey through a new environment and
exploring all aspects - working collaboratively to socially negotiate
tasks
41Discussion
- Break into two teams based on your interests
- Pre-clinical teaching
- Clinical teaching
- In your team identify a topic
- Discuss how critical thinking activities can be
integrated into teaching this topic and consider
- How practical is it to integrate these types of
activities - What barriers (personal / system) may prevent
this integration - How can this activity be evaluated
- Record your responses on page 4 of the session
handout and prepare to share your ideas
42Summary
- Was critical thinking prompted during this
session? - If yes, in what ways?
- If no, how could it have been?
Reflection questions, embedded questions,
classifying teaching activities, summarizing,
self-evaluation, collaborating on a problem,
engaging with content from multiple perspectives
. . .