Title:
1Will this Thinking be on the Test? Using
Critical Thinking to Engage Students in Thinking
Deeply in Your Discipline
Please fill out the True-False worksheet while
waiting for session to start!
- Dine and Discover Series
- Delphi Center for Teaching and learning
- Patricia Payette, PhD
- Executive Director, i2a
- Associate Director, Delphi Center
- Patty.payette_at_louisville.edu
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2Session Objectives
- Explore concepts and definitions of critical
thinking - Examine and articulate the fundamental concepts
and central questions that live inside your
courses and assignments, but often seem elusive
to students - Revise or revisit your teaching activities to
more effectively engage students in original
inquiry, and to think critically
2
3Focused Listing What is critical thinking?
- Think of a specific course that you teach, or a
specific learning context in which you teach
and/or mentor students to think critically. - Describe in a short list the changes in
students mindset (or mental models) you want
to see in them at the end of your time with them
in the classroom, lab, etc. (e.g. ask relevant
questions). - Page 2 of your worksheet packet
4Focused Listing What is critical thinking?
- Lets share our focused listing regarding
the changes in students thinking, or thinking
abilities, we want to see our students achieve.
5For your Teaching Toolbox Focused Listing
- Focuses student attention on a single important
term, concept, name, idea from a class session
and asks them to list several ideas - Helps students recall the most important points
related to a topic
6For your Teaching Toolbox Focused Listing
- Helps faculty assess what students retain about a
concept OR unearth assumptions or preconceptions
students bring to the class - Use in groups
- or as individual prompt to help students recall
information - or as a prompt class discussion or review for an
exam - It is a low stakes way to assess students
thinking
Question How could you use Focused Listing to
engage students?
7One definition of critical thinking
Decisions Synthesize Application
Understanding Concepts Appreciation
(Scriven and Paul, 2003)
8Ideas to Action The Basics
- Ideas to Action (i2a) Using Critical Thinking
to Foster Student Learning and Community
Engagement is our Quality Enhancement Plan (QEP). - Part of our accreditation report to SACS-COC to
demonstrate our ongoing commitment to student
learning - Our 10-year initiative we created to renew our
focus on critical thinking and community
engagement and the undergraduate experience. -
9i2a connecting classroom, campus and community
10For more information on i2a
- Home Page
- http//louisville.edu/ideastoaction
- Faculty Exemplars
- www.louisville.edu/ideastoaction/resources
- Faculty Speak Video
- www.louisville.edu/ideastoaction/resources/media
- Assessment
- http//louisville.edu/ideastoaction/what/assessmen
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11Making critical thinking visibleA
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 open mindedly within alternative systems
of thought, recognizing and assessing, as needs
be, their assumptions, implications, and
practical consequences - Communicates effectively with others in figuring
out solutions to complex problems
11
The Miniature Guide to Critical Thinking, 2008,
page 2
12How do you make critical thinking visible?
- Choose one critical thinking skill/behavior from
the list of the well-cultivated critical
thinker that you teach (or mentor) students to do
well. - Paraphrase it in your own words and elaborate on
that behavior as it relates to a specific
teaching context. - In other words
- Give an example of how you teach this skill or an
assignment that helps students master this skill.
- For example.
- Try to describe the teaching/learning dynamic in
terms of a metaphor, an illustration, a concept ,
or a diagram. Its like
Page 3 of your worksheet packet
13For your teaching tool box SEE-I
- S State it
- E Elaborate
- E Exemplify
- I Illustrate
14Why use SEE-I?
- Using a SEE-I prompt requires you to clarify
your thinking about an idea, concept or problem - See page 44 in Aspiring Thinkers Guide
- Communicating about your ideas or thinking using
the SEE-I can be a tool for checking the accuracy
of your thinking
15Gerald Nosich on the SEE-I
- If you can accurately S,E,E, then I a concept
or principle in a course, it means you almost
certainly have a good grasp of it, that you
understand it to a much greater degree than if
you are merely able to state it.
Nosich, G. Learning to Think Things Through A
Guide to Critical Thinking Across the
Curriculum. (2009). p. 35.
16When to use a SEE-I
- As a prompt for courses or other learning
contexts when teaching a new concept or when
checking for understanding - As a prompt for going deeper during a discussion
Can you elaborate on that? Does someone have
an example of this? - As a homework assignment /exam review/exam
question - Other?
17Examples of SEE-I in action
- Dr. Lynn Boyd
- College of Business
Question When could you use the SEE-I to prompt
your students critical thinking about a concept,
idea, or topic in your course? Page 4 of your
worksheet packet
18Teaching Toolbox Fundamental and Powerful (FP)
Concepts
- explain or help us think about a huge body of
questions, problems, information, and situations.
- are attached to a course theme
- are to be contrasted with individual bits of
information, or with less general concepts. - reflect the primary and essential thinking
trait(s) you want students to achieve at the end
of an assignment/course.
Bottom Line What you are aiming for is to make
those fp concepts part of the way students think.
19Faculty Examples of FP Concepts
- English Texts construct culture cultures are
complex sites of contest. - Finance Almost all decisions that corporations
make have to be made under conditions of
uncertainty. - Psychology Human thought and behavior can be
studied scientifically. - Engineering analysis Use the principles of
mathematics and science to obtain analytical
solutions to engineering problems.
20FP Concepts for ELFH 690 Internship in
Postsecondary Education
- Higher Education Administration
- (skills, attitudes, behaviors, concepts of the
field) - Career Fit
- (goals, interests, abilities, values,
experiences) - Professionalism
- (leadership, interacting with others, choices,
expectations)
21Fundamental and Powerful Concepts (worksheet, p.
3)
Try writing one or more fp concepts from your
field/discipline that are essential to a course
you are teaching. Page 5 of your worksheet
packet Remember that fp concepts are used in
your thinking about every important question or
problem in the course.. yet they also allow
you to begin to think through questions that lie
beyond the scope of the course
Question how can you illuminate and revisit the
fp in your assignments and course activities?
22Making FP concepts take root Promoting Deep
Learning
Deep learning is learning that takes root in our
apparatus of understanding, in the embedded
meanings that define us and that we use to define
the world Tagg (2003)
Deep knowledge
Tagg, J. (2003). The learning paradigm college.
Boston, MA Anker.
23Teaching Toolbox Promoting Deep Learning
- Helps students go beneath the rote memorization
of an idea to think through ideas and
concepts - Relies on making connections between ideas and
information (connecting the dots) - Applies ideas and concepts to real life
- Fosters the integration and synthesis of
information with prior learning or knowledge
24(No Transcript)
25Teaching Toolbox Thinking Through Important
Ideas and Concepts
- See page 46 in Aspiring Thinkers Guide
- Choose one FP concept from your list of course
concepts - 1. State the meaning of the concept in one simple
sentence (boil down its essence in everyday
language) - X is. or In other words.
- 2. State the significance of the idea or concept
- This idea is important because.
- 3. Give an example of the concept (as it applies
to real life) - For example.
- 4. Connect the concept or idea to other concepts
in the subject - This concept is connected to the following
ideas/concepts within the subject - 5. Give examples for number 4. above
- Some examples that show the relationship between
this idea and other important ideas are.
Page 6 of your worksheet packet
26Thinking Through Important Ideas Why and When?
- Allows you to help students move beyond
memorization and work with new concepts - Promote deep learning by focusing on
- Integration
- Synthesis
- Real life relevance
27Central Course Question
- provides the structure through which everything
else is understood and all components of the
course are connected. - serves to unify your vision of the course and the
field. - is an open-ended but specific question that is
ripe for exploration from a number of angles and
has no easy, central answer. - functions like a mission statement for your
course
28Faculty Examples of Central Course Questions
English In what ways and why did England change
in the transition from medieval to early modern,
and what was the role of texts in that
change? Criminal Justice How does reading,
understanding, and critiquing scholarly research
publications in the field of criminal justice
system develop a consumerism for criminal justice
research?
29Central Course Questions and FP Concepts
Almost all decisions that corporations make have
to be made under conditions of uncertainty.
- Central Course Questions from Finance
- What are the major sources of uncertainty in
doing business at home and abroad? - 2. How is the required reward affected by the
level and sources of uncertainty? - 3. What are the compounding and mitigating
sources of uncertainty on the multinational
level? - 4. How do multinational enterprises adapt their
activities to manage uncertainty on the
multinational level?
30Central Course Questions and FP Concepts
FP Concept from Biology An individual human's
survival depends on homeostasis the maintenance
of relatively constant internal body conditions
which are favorable for survival and function of
many specialized cell types. Central Course
Questions How do the forms of human body
structures support their function? How do the
form and function of human body structures
contribute to the maintenance of
homeostasis? How can we monitor the function of
such structures in order to 1) understand their
response to challenges and 2) determine whether
they are working well enough to maintain
homeostasis?
31Teaching toolbox your central course question
Try writing the central course question of one of
your courses. Write four versions of
it. Consider Which one seems to capture the
most central question of your course?
Page 7 of your worksheet
32Your central course question
Question How can you use your central course
question to foster and illuminate the critical
thinking you want your students to practice?
- Try this at home
- Writing an answer to that question in a few
paragraphs and consider how your course currently
responds and reflects your answer.
33Core Concepts teaching critical thinking
Make explicit the thinking you want.
Hold students responsible for the thinking
they do.
Engage students in the thinking you want.
34Lets share 10 Insights
- Lets generate 10 ideas, insights, strategies or
new concepts you are taking away from todays
session.
Page 8 of your worksheet