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DEVELOPING CRITICAL THINKERS

Learn how to foster critical thinking in your students through Brookfield's core assumptions and strategies. Discover the types of assumptions, practice modes, and teaching models that promote informed action and integration of diverse perspectives.

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DEVELOPING CRITICAL THINKERS

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  1. DEVELOPINGCRITICAL THINKERS Stephen Brookfield Distinguished University Professor University of St. Thomas www.stephenbrookfield.com

  2. CORE ASSUMPTIONS • Sincerity of Assumptions Does NOT Equate with Students’ Goodwill • Good Teaching = Whatever Helps Our Students Learn • Best Practice is Critically Reflective – Checking Our Assumptions About Practice • Most Important Pedagogic Knowledge – How Students Experience Learning

  3. CIRCLE OF VOICES Each person has up to 1 minute to say whatever they wish to say on the topic – no interruptions allowed. Once all have spoken the group moves into .. Open conversation: here you only talk about what someone else said in the opening round WHAT’S THE MOST RECENT EXAMPLE OF CRITICAL THINKING YOU’VE SEEN OR PRACTICED?

  4. WHAT IS IT? 4 FUNCTIONS • IDENTIFYING OUR ASSUMPTIONS • CHECKING THEIR ACCURACY & VALIDITY • VIEWING IDEAS & ACTIONS FROM ALTERNATE PERSPECTIVES • TAKING INFORMED ACTION - THE SURVIVAL SKILL OF ADULT LIFE

  5. WHY FOCUS ON IT?To Take Informed Action • Action Based on Evidence That Can be Cited & Considered By Others • Action That Can be Explained & Justified • Action That Has Its Assumptions Known & Checked • Action That Stands a Chance of Achieving Its Intended Consequence • Action That’s In Our Best Interest

  6. INFORMED ACTION = APPLYING & EXTENDING KNOWLEDGE • Deciding that an idea or practice has utility or ‘fit’ in an area outside its original formulation • Deciding an idea or practice is indeed appropriate for a context • Learning to recognize the cues in situations that call forth certain ideas & practices • Understanding that informed action needs new knowledge

  7. TYPES OF ASSUMPTIONS • CAUSAL - purports to explain a sequence of events • PRESCRIPTIVE - assumptions about how we wish things to be • PARADIGMATIC - framing, structuring assumptions viewed as obvious, natural, common sense

  8. WHEN WE SCRUTINIZE ASSUMPTIONS WE … • ANALYZE OUR PRACTICES & IDEAS FOR SIGNIFICANT CUES THAT CAUSE US TO JUDGE AN ASSUMPTION FITS • MAKE JUDGMENTS CONCERNING THE ACCURACY & RELIABILITY OF EVIDENCE

  9. WHEN WE SEE THINGS FROM DIFFERENT VIEWPOINTS WE ... UNDERSTAND BETTER HOW INFORMATION FROM ONE SOURCE OR CATEGORY FITS WITH INFORMATION FROM OTHERS INTEGRATE OUR ACTIONS WITH THOSE OF OTHERSKNOW HOW TO COMMUNICATE IDEAS TO OTHERS

  10. Circular Response • 1st person responds to question for up to a minute – no interruptions. • 2nd person responds to 1st person’s comments, 3rd person responds to 2nd person’s comments, and so on. • When everyone has spoken group moves into open conversation. WHAT MOST HELPS YOUR STUDENTS LEARN CRITICAL THINKING?

  11. WHEN IS IT BEST TAUGHT? • Beyond the Novice Level • After Initial Assimilation • When Classroom Skills and Knowledge Have to be Applied in the ‘Real’ World • When Independent Judgment is Called For

  12. WHEN IS IT BEST TAUGHT? • When Alternative Explanations and Interpretations are Possible • When Actions, Decisions, & Judgments Need to be Informed • When Thinking on Your Feet & Improvisation is Called For

  13. CRITICAL INCIDENT QUESTIONNAIRE • Moment Most Engaged • Moment Most Distanced • Action Most Helpful • Action Most Puzzling • What Surprised You Most

  14. CRITICAL INCIDENT QUESTIONNAIRE • Anonymous • Report Back at Start of Next Class • Responsiveness Not Capitulation • Early Warning System • Illustrates Diversity in Classroom • Models Critical Thinking

  15. Snowballing Share responses in pairs Pairs join to share as quartets Quartets join to share as octets At each stage groups share emerging issues, questions & differences Question – HOW DO YOU MODEL CRITICAL THINKING FOR YOUR STUDENTS?

  16. WHAT STUDENTS SAY IS HELPFUL - MODELING … • Seeing it MODELED & Named • When Teachers Talk Out Loud Their Assumptions Behind Practices • When Teachers Do Regular Assumption Audits – “Here are my assumptions I’m working under” • When Teachers Say When Their Assumptions are Confirmed & Challenged

  17. MODELING … • When Teachers Use the CIQ to Check Assumptions in Front of Students • When Teachers Bring in Real Life Experience When Assumptions Were Confirmed & Challenged • In Team Teaching – When Members Take Different Positions and Clarify Each Others’ Assumptions

  18. MODELING … • When Teachers Critique Their Own Positions - Moving Around the Classroom • When Teachers ‘Speak in Tongues’ at Different Stations in the Classroom • When Teachers Consistently Discuss Their Criteria for Judging Credibility of Authoritative Sources

  19. WHAT SHOULD WE REMEMBER AS TEACHERS? • Modeling, Modeling, Modeling • Resistance is Normal & Predictable • Critical Thinking is Incremental - Start Well Away From the Student’s Reasoning & Actions, Help them Learn Critical Protocols, and Over Time Move Closer and Closer to the Student’s Own Reasoning & Actions

  20. WHAT SHOULD WE REMEMBER? • BUILD A CASE USING FORMER RESISTERS WHEN POSSIBLE • FOCUS ON SPECIFIC EXPERIENCES • CRITICAL THINKING IS A SOCIAL LEARNING PROCESS – PEERS AS CRITICAL MIRRORS

  21. Stephen Brookfield Books • Developing Critical Thinkers (1987) • Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher (1995) • The Power of Critical Theory (2004) • Discussion as a Way of Teaching (2005, 2nd Ed.) with Stephen Preskill • The Skillful Teacher (2006, 2nd. Ed.) • All published by Jossey Bass, San Francisco • Home Page: www.stephenbrookfield.com

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