Title: CRITICAL THINKING
1WEEK 11
CRITICAL THINKING
2OUTLINE
- Concept and scope.
- Taxonomy Bloom.
- Scientific Method.
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4WHY CRITICAL THINKING? 1
- "We should be teaching students how to think.
Instead, we are teaching them what to think."
(Clement and Lochhead, 1980), - How to think" - to understand and evaluate the
subject matter , discipline and everyday life. - What to think - the subject matter or
discipline content of the course.
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5WHY CRITICAL THINKING? 2
- The mine-is better habit (egocentric)
- Socio-centric
- Defense mechanism (face saving)
- Resistance to change
- Conformity
- Stereotyping
- Self deception
- Overgeneralizations
- Oversimplifying
- Double standard
- Shifting the burden proof
- Irrational appeal
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6CONCEPT 1
- Kriths (Kritikos) means to judge.
- Critical thinking is, in short, self directed,
self disciplined, self monitored and self
corrective thinking. (Paul Elder, 2001). - Critical thinking is that mode of thinking
about any subject, content, or problem in which
the thinker improves the quality of his or her
thinking by skillfully analyzing, assessing, and
reconstructing it. Critical thinking is
self-directed, self-disciplined, self-monitored,
and self-corrective thinking. (Foundation for
Critical Thinking, 2011)
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7CONCEPT 2
- Critical thinking can be described as the
scientific method applied by ordinary people to
the ordinary world. This is true because critical
thinking mimics the well-known method of
scientific investigation a question is
identified, an hypothesis formulated, relevant
data sought and gathered, the hypothesis is
logically tested and evaluated, and reliable
conclusions are drawn from the result (continue)
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8CONCEPT 3
- All of the skills of scientific investigation
are matched by critical thinking, which is
therefore nothing more than scientific method
used in everyday life rather than in specifically
scientific disciplines or endeavors. (Therefore)
Critical thinking is scientific thinking.
(Schafersman, 1991)
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10ACTIVITIES (Jennifer Moon, 2008)
- Review of someone else argument.
- Evaluation of an object.
- Development of an argument.
- Critical thinking about the self.
- Review of an incident.
- Constructive response to the arguments of others.
- Critical thinking as a habit of engagement with
the world.
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11SYNTHESIS ON CRITICAL THINKING
- Left brain.
- Based on sequence and logics.
- Think to make a decision.
- Careful in risk taking.
- Think to seek the truth.
- Thinking for oneself.
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13Too many people do not make up their own minds,
but have their minds made up for them by
salesmen, advertisers, parents, propagandists,
TV, newspapers and so on.(Abraham Maslow)
Does never lie
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14ENHANCEMENT
- Games on language.
- Argument.
- Discussion.
- Reading.
- Observation.
- Etc.
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15TWO CATEGORIES
- LOW Critical Thinking
- Differentiate.
- Compare.
- Categorise.
- Make a sequence.
- HIGH Critical Thinking
- Futuristic thinking.
- Inference.
- Generalise.
- Find a reason.
- Justify the facts and the sources.
- Conclude.
16DISADVANTAGES OF CRITICAL THINKING
- Reactive and responsive.
- Highlighting logic and rational.
- Fear to make mistake and propose new and novel
ideas.
17BLOOM TAXONOMY
- It has been proposed in 1956 by a committee of
educators of US chaired by Benjamin Bloom. - Majority always refer Bloom Taxonomy to the
skills in the cognitive domain (there also
affective and psychomotor domains) revolve around
knowledge, comprehension, and critical thinking
of a particular topic.
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19KNOWLEDGE
- What is...?
- What happened after...?
- Which is true or false...?
- How many...?
- Name
- Define
- Who
20COMPREHENSION
- Who do you think...?
- What was the main idea...?
- Can you provide the suitable example...?
- Tell/write in your own words...
- Distinguish between...
21APPLICATION
- Can you apply the theory/principle/method/equation
...? - From the information given, can you develop a set
of instructions about...? - What factors would you change if...?
- What questions would you ask of...?
22ANALYSIS
- Compare
- Explain
- Distinguish
- Categorise
- What was the turning point in the game?What do
you see as other possible outcomes?
23SYNTHESIS
- Create
- Invent
- Develop a proposal
- What if?
- Can you design a ... to ...?
- Can you see a possible solution to...?
- Why not compose a song about...?
24EVALUATION
- Judge
- Justify
- Argue
- Do you believe?
- Can you defend your position about...?
- What do you think about...?
- Are you a ... person?
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26A REVISION ON BLOOMS TAXONOMY (Sousa, 2006)
ORIGINAL VERSION (1956) REVISED VERSION (2001)
EVALUATION SYNTHESIS ANALYSIS APPLICATION COMPREHENSION KNOWLEDGE CREATE EVALUATE ANALYZE APPLY UNDERSTAND REMEMBER
27SCIENTIFIC METHOD 1
- Science is the field of study which attempts to
describe and understand the nature of the
universe in whole or part. - Scientific method is a method in research to
support or disprove a theory. - Theory is a hypothesis or group of hypotheses
which have been validated by repeatable finding
but not to the point of near certainty.
28- Hypothesis (an educated guess as to the likely
results of an experiment) - Theory
- Scientific law (a statement accepted as fact by
the scientific community
29SCIENTIFIC METHOD 2
- Scientific method is an important way in gaining
knowledge, besides that there are also other ways
like revelation (holy book) and moral insight. - Basic steps Observation, Question (problem
statement), Hypothesis (prediction), Method
(quantitative and qualitative), and Result.
30SCIENTIFIC METHOD 3
- In university, scientific method must be applied
in any kind of research, that finally become
thesis, dissertation, report, book or article. - Scientific/academic journal might accept either
research-based article and non-research-based
article (book review, paper discussion, and
practitioner article).
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