What are Critical Thinking Skills?
What are Critical Thinking Skills?
In this course, you are asked to complete several activities that call for the use of critical thinking skills. These activities encourage you to think critically about important questions. Questions and tasks require you to make a judgment or come to a conclusion based on information and reasoning. In Social Studies 30-1, those questions focus on ideologies and their impact on you and society.
Critical thinking skills are essential in today's world. Every day we are faced with decisions we need to make, problems we need to solve, or issues about which we must establish positions. An uncritical thinker accepts what other people have to say at face value without thinking about the issue, but a critical thinker looks at the issue and reaches conclusions by considering the merits and shortcomings of alternatives. Critical thought leads not only to forming a position on a subject but it leads also to action.
"To know and not to act is not to know."
Wang Yang-ming, 14th Century
Critical thinking skills are essential in our globalizing world. Through increased movement of people, trade, and communication technology, we are becoming more aware that our actions have consequences. Many of life's choices do not have simple, black-and-white answers.
How can we decide what to believe or what action to take? By building our thinking and reasoning skills, we can develop the tools to solve problems, analyze issues, and make reasonable choices.
A critical challenge helps you develop your critical thinking skills. Most critical challenges encourage a person to
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focus on the key concept
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gather relevant information
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watch for bias and look at alternative viewpoints
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assess the evidence
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form a position or a solution to a problem
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defend and support a position
A community of learners:
Remember that you are not alone. From the days of the caveman to today's technologically interconnected world, people have lived in communities where they can share knowledge and skills. In the traditional classroom, ideas, knowledge, and perspectives
can be shared. In our homes, by phone, and over the Internet, issues can be discussed and people can come to broader understandings.
Tools for Critical Thinking |
Critical thinkers have background knowledge:
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Critical thinkers use criteria for judgment:
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Critical thinkers use vocabulary that includes
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Critical thinkers use thinking strategies that include:
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Critical thinkers have attitudes that include
Adapted from
The Critical Thinking Consortium
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