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Title: EDD 5229


1
EDD 5229 Liberal Studies in Knowledge Society
Topic 10 Understanding the Curriculum Aim of
Liberal Studies How Critical is Critical
Thinking?
2
Critical Thinking in Senior-Secondary Curriculum
Liberal Studies of HKSAR
  • In Sept, 2001, Learning to Learning The Way
    Forwards in Curriculum Development
  • Critical Thinking is identified as one of the
    nine generic skills within the framework of the
    curriculum reform
  • Critical thinking has been defined as one of the
    three generic skills that should be prioritized
    among the nine skills.
  • Since public feedback indicated that the
    curriculum reform envisaged is too broad, a
    priority focus will be placed on the development
    of three of these generic skills, namely
    communication skills, creativity and critical
    thinking skills, though the others should not be
    neglected. (Curriculum Development Council,
    2001, p. 25)

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Critical Thinking in Senior-Secondary Curriculum
Liberal Studies of HKSAR
  • In Sept, 2001, Learning to Learning The Way
    Forwards in Curriculum Development
  • The idea of critical thinking In the document,
    critical thinking is depicted as
  • Critical thinking skills help students to
    draw out meaning from given data or statements,
    generate and evaluate arguments, and make their
    own judgement. (CDC, 2001, p. 24)

5
Critical Thinking in Senior-Secondary Curriculum
Liberal Studies of HKSAR
  • In July, 2007 Liberal Studies Curriculum and
    Assessment Guide (Secondary 4-6)
  • Curriculum Aims
  • The aims of Liberal Studies at the Senior
    Secondary Level are ...
  • (d) to develop in students a range of skills
    for life-long learning, including critical
    thinking skills, creativity, problem-solving
    skills, communication skills and information
    technology skills (CDC and HKEAA, 2007, p. 5)

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Critical Thinking in Senior-Secondary Curriculum
Liberal Studies of HKSAR
  • In July, 2007 Liberal Studies Curriculum and
    Assessment Guide (Secondary 4-6)
  • Learning Outcomes
  • By the end of the course, students should
    be able to
  • (d) identify the values underlying
    different views and judgments on personal and
    social issues, and apply critical thinking
    skills, creativity and different perspectives in
    making decisions and judgments on issues and
    problems at both personal and social levels.
    (CDC and HKEAA, 2007, p. 6)

8
Critical Thinking in Senior-Secondary Curriculum
Liberal Studies of HKSAR
  • In 2009, Package on The Learning and Teaching of
    Critical Thinking Skills (Senior Secondary)

9
Although it sometimes seems that there is very
little that academics can agree upon, there is
considerable agreement among experts in the field
regarding the definition of critical thinking.
Different authors use different terms and vary
in the breadth of their definition, but overall
there are no major disagreements about the sorts
of skills that are included under a critical
thinking rubric. (Halpern, 2003 Quoted in Ku et
al., 2009, p.2)
10
The term critical thinking is the use of those
cognitive skills or strategies that increase the
probability of a desirable outcome. It is
purposeful, reasoned, and goal directed. It is
the kind of thinking involved in solving
problems, formulating inferences, calculating
likelihoods, and making decisions. Critical
thinkers use these skills appropriately, without
prompting, and usually with conscious intent, in
a variety of settings. That is, they are
predisposed to think critically. When we think
critically, we are evaluating the outcomes of our
thought processes how good a decision is or how
well a problem is solved. Critical thinking also
involves evaluating the thinking process the
reasoning that went into the conclusion weve
arrived at or the kinds of factors considered in
making a decision. (Halpern, 2003 Quoted in Ku
et al., 2009, p.2)
11
The five categories of critical thinking
skills 1. Verbal Reasoning Skills 2.
Argument Analysis Skills 3. Skills in Thinking
as Hypothesis Testing 4. Using Likelihood and
Uncertainty, and 5. Decision Making and
Problem Solving Skills
12
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The idea of critical thinking in education can be
    traced back to John Deweys concept of
    reflective thinking (Dewey, 1933 1939).
    Throughout its short history of development,
    particularly in the US, the field is filled with
    contentions and disagreements. It is far from a
    field of considerable agreement or no major
    disagreement.

13
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • First round of debate
  • In 1962, Robert Ennis paper entitled A concept
    of critical thinking was published in Harvard
    Educational Review. In the paper, critical
    thinking was defined as a correct assessing of
    statement. (Ennis, 1962, p. 81) Ennis further
    conceptualizes that twelve aspects of critical
    thinking are

14
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • First round of debate
  • twelve aspects of critical thinking are
  • Grasping the meaning of a statement.
  • Judging whether there is ambiguity in a line of
    reasoning.
  • Judging whether certain statements contradict
    each other.
  • Judging whether a conclusion follows necessarily.
  • Judging whether a statement is specific enough.
  • Judging whether is actually the application of a
    certain principle.
  • Judging whether an observation statement is
    reliable.
  • Judging whether an inductive conclusion is
    warranted.
  • Judging whether the problem has been identified.
  • Judging whether something is an assumption.
  • Judging whether a definition is adequate.
  • Judging whether a statement made by an alleged
    authority is acceptable. (Ennis, 1962, 83)

15
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • First round of debate
  • Ennis' conception of critical thinking has been
    criticized as pure skills conception (Siegel,
    1988, p. 6) and it is but a battery of atomic
    technical skills. (Paul, 1994, p. 185 see also
    Burbules and Berk, 1999 Walters, 1994
    Thayer-Bacon, 2000)

16
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The second round of debate
  • In the 1980s, Ennis took two further initiations
    in developing his conception of critical thinking
  • He developed two sets of standardized-test
    instruments, i.e. Cornell Critical Thinking Tests
    (Ennis and Millman, 1982) to measure levels of
    critical thinking performance.
  • Ennis published a paper entitled A Taxonomy of
    Critical Thinking Disposition and Ability. In
    the paper, Ennis responded to the criticism of
    skill-bias by adding disposition into the
    conception of critical thinking. According, he
    developed a taxonomy consisting of 14 levels of
    dispositions and 12 levels of ability. (Ennis,
    1987)

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19
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The second round of debate
  • Ennis efforts triggered another round of
    criticism.
  • John McPeck criticizes that critical thinking
    cannot be reduced to a few mechanical decoding
    skills and more specifically the major
    shortcomings of both the Cornell tests is that
    the format of a standardized multiple-choice test
    does not permit the comprehensive or circumspect
    judgements that are required by the concept of
    critical thinking. (McPeck, 1981, p.145)

20
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The second round of debate
  • Ennis efforts triggered another round of
    criticism.
  • Harvey Siegel also criticizes So instead of two
    roughly equal components of critical thinking,
    proficiencies (skills) and tendencies
    (dispositions), what Enniss conceptionamounts to
    is actually a highly complex list of
    proficiencies coupled with the simple admonition
    to exercise the proficiencies. (T)he tendencies
    to utilize critical thinking skills is
    under-analyzed and under-attended to in Enniss
    work. (Siegel, 1988, p.7)
  • Siegel specifically criticizes the Cornel
    Critical Thinking Tests as the one-sided heroic
    effort to develop effective tests for the
    proficiencies (skills) in the total absence of
    effort to develop effective tests for the
    tendency (disposition) (Siegel, 1988, p.8)

21
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The second round of debate
  • Ennis efforts triggered another round of
    criticism.
  • More recently, Burbules (1993 Burbeles
    Beck,1999) and Walters (1994) criticize that
    critical thinking may plausibly be reduced to
    examination skills of mechanical logicism.

22
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The third round of the debate
  • John McPeck queries whether it is possible to
    teach critical thinking as generalized skills
    without relating it to specific subject content.
    He criticizes the content-free approach to
    critical-thinking instruction commonly adopted in
    the 1970s. He underlines that thinking is always
    thinking about something. To think about nothing
    is a conceptual impossibility. (1981, p.3) More
    specifically, McPeck contends that

23
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The third round of the debate
  • In isolation from a particular subject, the
    phrase critical thinking neither refers to nor
    denotes any particular skill. It follows from
    this that it makes no sense to talk about
    critical thinking as a distinct subject and that
    it therefore cannot profitably be taught as such.
    To the extent that critical thinking is not about
    a specific subject X, it is both conceptually and
    practically empty. The statement I teach
    critical thinking, simpliciter, is vacuous
    because there is no generalized skill properly
    call critical thinking. (p. 5)

24
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The third round of the debate
  • McPecks criticism meets with forceful
    counter-arguments from Stephen Norris (1990),
    Richard Paul, and Harvey Siegel (1990). Norris
    and Paul defend that critical-thinking
    instruction is content-free, while Siegel
    provides a more balanced view of suggesting that
    some aspect of critical thinking can be taught in
    terms of generalized skills, while some are
    subject and content specific. (Siegel, 1988
    1990)

25
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Round four Reformulations and elaborations.
  • Harvey Siegel re-conceptualizes critical thinking
    by injecting the concept of reason into critical
    thinking instruction.
  • He suggests that to be a critical thinker is to
    be appropriately moved by reasons. A critical
    thinker is one who appreciates and accepts the
    importance, and convicting force, of reasons.
    When assessing claims, making judgments,
    evaluating procedures, or contemplating
    alternative actions, the critical thinker seeks
    reasons on which to base her assessments,
    judgments, and actions. To seek reasons,
    moreover, is to recognize and commit oneself to
    principles. (Siegel, 1988, p.32-33)

26
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Round four Reformulations and elaborations.
  • Harvey Siegel re-conceptualizes critical thinking
    by injecting the concept of reason into critical
    thinking instruction.
  • By reason, Siegel makes use the conception put
    forth by Scheffler. He indicates that reason is
    always a matter of abiding by general rules or
    principles reason is always a matter of treating
    equal reasons equally, and of judging the issues
    in the light of general principles to which one
    has bound oneself if I could judge reasons
    differently when they bear on my interests, or
    disregard my principles when they conflict with
    my own advantage, I should have no principles at
    all. The concepts of principles, reasons and
    consistency thus go together. (Scheffler, 1973
    quoted in Siegel, 1988, p.33)

27
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Round four Reformulations and elaborations.
  • Harvey Siegel re-conceptualizes critical thinking
    by injecting the concept of reason into critical
    thinking instruction.
  • Siegel further differentiates critical thinking
    into two dimensions, namely proficiency and
    spirit. The former refers to the capacities of
    making use of "reason" in assessing one's
    thinking, while the later signifies " a
    willingness to conform judgment and action to
    principle, not simply a ability to so conform. On
    who has the critical attitude has a certain
    character as well as certain skills a character
    which is inclined to seek, and to base judgment
    and action upon, reasons which rejects
    partiality and arbitrariness which is committed
    to the objective evaluation of relevant evidence
    and which values such aspects of critical
    thinking as intellectual honesty justice to
    evidence, sympathetic and impartial consideration
    of interests, objectivity, and impartiality."
    (Siegel, 1988, p. 39)

28
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Round four Reformulations and elaborations.
  • Richard Paul makes a distinction between the weak
    sense and the strong sense of critical thinking
  • By weal sense of critical thinking, it refers to
    training of atomic technical skills of logical
    thinking. As a result, students studying
    critical thinking at the university level have
    highly developed belief systems buttressed by
    deep-seated uncritical, egocentric, and
    sociocentric habits of thought by which they
    interpret and process their experiences, whether
    academic or not, and place them into some larger
    perspective. those students become sophistic
    rather ten less so, more skilled in rationalizing
    and intellectualizing their biases. (Paul, 1994,
    184)

29
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Round four Reformulations and elaborations.
  • Richard Paul makes a distinction between the weak
    sense and the strong sense of critical thinking
  • By strong sense of critical thinking, it refers
    to the view which rejects the idea that critical
    thinking can be taught as a battery of atomic
    technical skills independent of egocentricbelief
    and commitments. Instead of atomic arguments it
    emphasizes argument network (points of view,
    frames of reference, worldviews, systems of
    thought) instead of merely teaching evaluation
    of atomic arguments it emphasizes a more
    dialectical and dialogical approaches. (1994, p.
    185-6)
  • Teaching critical thinking in a strong sense
    helps students develop reasoning skills precisely
    in those areas where they are most likely to have
    egocentric and sociocentric biases. Such biases
    exist most profoundly in areas of their
    identities and vested interests. (p. 190)

30
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Round four Reformulations and elaborations.
  • Richard Paul makes a distinction between the weak
    sense and the strong sense of critical thinking
  • Subsequently, Richard Paul established The Center
    for Critical Thinking at Sonoma State University
    in North California.
  • http//www.criticalthinking.org/about/ce
    nterforCT.cfm

31
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • The Delphi Report A statement of expert
    consensus for purpose of educational assessment
    and instruction, American Philosophical
    Association.
  • http//www.insightassessment.com/pdf_files/DEXad
    obe.PDF

32
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Definition of critical thinking
  • We understand critical thinking to be
    purposeful, self-regulatory judgment which
    results in interpretation, analysis, evaluation,
    and inference, as well as explanation of the
    evidential, conceptual, methodological,
    criteriological, or contextual consideration upon
    which that judgment is based. CT is essential as
    a tool of inquiry. As such, CT is a liberating
    force in education and a powerful resource in
    ones personal and civic life. While not
    synonymous with good thinking, CT is a pervasive
    and self rectifying human phenomenon.

33
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Definition of critical thinking (contd)
  • The ideal critical thinker is habitually
    inquisitive, well-informed, trustful of reason,
    open-minded, flexible, fair-minded in evaluation,
    honest in face of personal biases, prudent in
    making judgments, willing to reconsider, clear
    about issues, orderly in complex matters,
    diligent in seeking relevant information,
    reasonable in the selection of criteria, focused
    in inquiry, and persistent in seeking results
    which are as precise as the subject and the
    circumstances of inquiry permit. Thus, educating
    good critical thinkers means working toward this
    ideal. It combines developing CT skills with
    nurturing those dispositions which consistently
    yield useful insights and which are the basis of
    a rational and democratic society.

34
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Definition of critical thinking (contd)
  • The ideal critical thinker is habitually
    inquisitive, well-informed, trustful of reason,
    open-minded, flexible, fair-minded in evaluation,
    honest in face of personal biases, prudent in
    making judgments, willing to reconsider, clear
    about issues, orderly in complex matters,
    diligent in seeking relevant information,
    reasonable in the selection of criteria, focused
    in inquiry, and persistent in seeking results
    which are as precise as the subject and the
    circumstances of inquiry permit. Thus, educating
    good critical thinkers means working toward this
    ideal. It combines developing CT skills with
    nurturing those dispositions which consistently
    yield useful insights and which are the basis of
    a rational and democratic society.

35
CT cognitive skills and sub-skills
Skill Sub-skills
1. Interpretation Categorization Decoding significance Clarifying meaning
2. Analysis Examining ideas Identifying arguments Analyzing arguments
3. Evaluation Assessing claims Assessing arguments
4. Inference Querying evidence Conjecturing alternatives Drawing conclusions
5. Explanation Stating results Justifying procedures Presenting arguments
6. Self-regulation Self-examining Self-correcting
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Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Constituents of Critical Thinking Affective
    dispositions
  • Approaches to life and living in general
  • inquisitiveness with regard to a wide range of
    issues,
  • concern to become and remain generally
    well-informed,
  • alertness to opportunities to use CT,
  • trust in the processes of reasoned inquiry,
  • self-confidence in ones own ability to reason,
  • open-mindedness regarding divergent world view,
  • flexibility in considering alternatives and
    opinions,
  • understanding of the opinions of other people,
  • fair-mindedness in appraising reasoning,
  • honesty in facing ones own biases, prejudices,
    stereotypes, egocentric or sociocentric
    tendencies,
  • prudence in suspending, making or altering
    judgments,
  • willingness to consider and revise views where
    honest reflection suggests that change is
    warranted,

38
Critical Thinking An Intrinsic Evaluation
  • Constituents of Critical Thinking Affective
    dispositions
  • Approaches to specific issues, questions or
    problems
  • clarity in stating the question or concern,
  • orderliness in working with complexity,
  • diligence in seeking relevant information,
  • reasonableness in selecting and applying
    criteria,
  • care in focusing attention on the concern at
    hand,
  • persistence though difficulties are encountered
  • precision to the degree permitted by the subject
    and the circumstance.

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Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • In the late 1970s, two theoretical perspectives
    have emerged and invoked new critical conceptions
    in educational study. They have invoked profound
    challenges to the conventional conception of
    critical-thinking instruction. They are critical
    literacy and critical pedagogy. Both perspectives
    owe their theoretical origins from two similar
    sources, on Critical Theory of the Frankfurt
    School and the conception of The Pedagogy of the
    Oppressed (1972) from a Brazilian educator Paulo
    Freire.

41
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical literacy perspective
  • According to Freire's experiences in the program
    of literacy for Brazilian farmers, he expends the
    concept of literacy from merely reading and
    writing of words to reading and writing of the
    world. In his own words
  • It is impossible to carry out my literacy
    work or to understand literacy by divorcing the
    reading of the word from the reading of the
    world. Reading the word and learning how to write
    the word so one can later read it are preceded by
    learning how to write the world, that is, having
    the experience of changing the world and touching
    the world. (Freire and Macedo, 1987, p.49)

42
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical literacy perspective
  • Subsequently, Green (1988), Lankshear and Knobel
    (2003) reconceptualize literacy into three levels
  • Operational literacy It refers to the mastery of
    the decoding (reading) and encoding (writing)
    operations of systems of language or of other
    media. It indicates the ability to relate the
    words with the worlds represented.
  • Cultural literacy It refers to the mastery of
    the "system of meanings" and cultural system
    underlying a specific linguistic system. It
    indicates the capacity to interpreting the
    meanings "signified" in media.

43
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical literacy perspective
  • Subsequently, Green (1988), Lankshear and Knobel
    (2003) reconceptualize literacy into three levels
  • Critical literacy Based on the perspectives of
    the Critical Theory and constructionism,
    critical-literacy theorists begin with the
    assumption of "social construction of reality".
    And they emphasize that there are hypostatized
    power relations and frozen ideological relation
    at work underlying these realities and they in
    turn serve as legitimation and reproduction
    mechanism of particular institutional
    configuration. (Habermas, 1971 1979)
  • Accordingly. Critical literacy is defined as
    ability to unveil the legitmation bases
    underlying particular linguistic and cultural
    systems.
  • Furthermore, in Freire's conception, it is
  • To read the words and the read the world
  • To write the words and to write the world
  • To rewrite the world and to transform and improve
    the world

44
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical pedagogy perspective By applying the
    conception of social construction, legitimation
    and reproduction to education in general, the
    critical pedagogy put forth critical analysis
    beyond the conception of literacy and look into
    different aspects of pedagogy, such as (1)
    pedagogical content, (2) the pedagogical
    relationship, and (3) the pedagogical process,

45
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical pedagogy perspective
  • Pedagogical content
  • This perspective can be traced back to Basil
    Bernstien thesis How a society selects,
    classifies, distributes, transmits and evaluates
    the educational knowledge it considers to be
    public, reflects both the distribution of power
    and the principles of social control."
    (Bernstein, 1970, p.74)
  • Accordingly, the concerns about pedagogical
    content is to reveal how a particular curriculum
    legitimatizes and reproduces a particular
    institutional configuration.
  • At the same time, how it "marginalizes",
    "suppressed" and silences the others

46
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical pedagogy perspective
  • Pedagogical relationship
  • This aspect of inquiry in critical pedagogical
    can best be illustrated with Freire's conception
    of "the banking education".
  • Education thus becomes an act of depositing,
    in which the students are the depositories and
    the teacher is the depositor. Instead of
    communicating, the teacher issues communiqués and
    'makes deposits', which the students patiently
    receive, memorize, and repeat. This is the
    'banking' concept of education. The students,
    alienated like the slave in the Hegelian
    dialectic, accept their ignorance as justifying
    the teacher's existence" (Freire, 1972, p.45-46)

47
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical pedagogy perspective
  • Pedagogical relationship
  • To rectify, Freire advocates a dialogical
    relation through which students are encourage to
    reflect and re-write the world in which they find
    themselves. And in the process to liberate
    themselves from the situated and submerged
    contexts
  • These aspect of inquiry has initiated researches
    in both the perspectives of feminism and
    post-colonialism.

48
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical pedagogy perspective
  • Pedagogical process
  • This aspect of inquiry can be illustrated with
    Freire's conception of "problem-posing
    education."
  • By rejecting the banking concept of education,
    teachers and students can engage in a dialogical
    relation and "pose problem" to each others and
    more importantly to "the world" in which they are
    embedded.
  • "Problem-posing education involves a constant
    unveiling of reality (It) strives for the
    emergence of consciousness and critical
    intervention in reality." (Freire, 1972, p.54)
  • "In problem-posing education, men develop their
    power to perceive critically the way they exist
    in the world with which and in which they find
    themselves they come to see the world not as a
    static reality, but as a reality in process, in
    transformation." (Freire, 1972, p.56)

49
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Critical pedagogy perspective
  • Pedagogical process
  • "Problem-posing education affirms men as beings
    in the process of becoming - as unfinished,
    uncompleted beings in and with a likewise
    unfinished reality." (Freire, 1972, p.56-57)
  • This movement of inquiry must be directed
    towards humanization mans historical vocation.
    The pursuit of full humanity, however, cannot be
    carried out in isolation or individualism, but
    only in fellowship and solidarity therefore it
    cannot unfold in the antagonistic relations
    between oppressors and oppressed. Problem-posing
    education, as a humanist and liberating praxis,
    posits as fundamental that men subjected to
    domination mush fight for their emancipation.
    (Freire, 1972, p.58)

50
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Taking together, theorists of the critical
    literacy and critical pedagogy perspectives have
    waged some profound criticisms on critical
    thinking instruction.
  • Criticism on the decontextualization of the
    thinking process
  • It is criticized that critical thinking has
    abstracted human thinking processes as
    "decontextualized" and "disembedded" activities
    of pure reasoning and simple logical operations.
  • It is suggested that to rectify this pitfall the
    contextuality and historicity of thought should
    be reintroduced into critical thinking
    instruction.

51
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • Taking together, theorists of the critical
    literacy and critical pedagogy perspectives have
    waged some profound criticisms on critical
    thinking instruction.
  • Criticism on the decontextualization of the
    thinking process
  • The emphasis on the contextuality and historicity
    of thought has found echo in Max Horkheimer's
    critique on Immanuel Kant's famous conceptions of
    "pure reason" and " transcendental self"
  • "It is the human being who thinks, not the
    Ego or Reason. And that is not something
    abstract, such as the human essence, but always
    human beings living in a particular historical
    epoch." (Horkheimer, 1968, p.145 quoted in Hoy
    and McCarthy, 1995, p.9)

52
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • some profound criticisms on critical thinking
    instruction.
  • Criticism on the desubjectification of the
    thinker
  • It is criticized that critical thinking has
    abstracted thinkers as disembodied and
    disinterest individuals who are expected to
    provide assessment to argumentative claims with
    regards to their logical validity.
  • It is suggested that one way to rectify this
    fault, Habermas' thesis on the "knowledge-constitu
    tive interests" should be reintroduced
  • Another way to rectify the fault of
    desubjectification, critical thinking instruction
    should "re-subjectify thinkers as relational
    self, situated self, and embodied self and
    bring the conceptions of "care" and "recognition"
    back into the critical thinking instruction.

53
Critical Thinking An Extrinsic Evaluation
  • some profound criticisms on critical thinking
    instruction.
  • Criticism on the objectification of the objects
    of thinking
  • It is criticized that critical thinking has
    abstracted the objects of inquiry as objectively
    existing realities and given facts. The primary
    concern is simply to assess the validity of the
    logical connections between premises and
    conclusions.
  • It is suggested that to rectify this pitfall,
    critical thinkers should think of the objects of
    inquiry as socially constructed realities, which
    are loaded with hypostatized power relations,
    frozen ideological configurations, and
    legitimatized systemic distortions.

54
Reconstructing of a Framework of Critical
Thinking for Liberal Studies
  • To summarize, it seems that the main difference
    among the fractions in the controversy is the
    meanings each fraction gives to the concept of
    criticality. There seems to be at least five
    different meanings of criticality at work in
    these debates and criticisms on the meaning of
    critical thinking. These different meanings of
    criticality are

55
Reconstructing of a Framework of Critical
Thinking for Liberal Studies
  • Critical means evaluative To most of the
    scholars within the field of critical thinking,
    to be critical means to evaluate and assess.
    Accordingly, critical thinking is simply
    discerned as evaluating the logical correctness
    of thinking or more specifically argumentative
    claims. Critical thinking instruction is simply
    training of logical- operational skills.

56
Reconstructing of a Framework of Critical
Thinking for Liberal Studies
  • Criticality means critique on the contextuality
    and historicity of thinking Most of the topics
    and issues addressed in social studies and
    citizenship education are socio-politically
    framed issues and phenomena. Hence, to examined
    the discursive configuration at work behind each
    of these issues is vital in social studies and
    citizenship education.

57
Reconstructing of a Framework of Critical
Thinking for Liberal Studies
  • Critique on the subjectivity and the situation of
    the thinkers Participants in the discourse of
    social and political issues are "situated",
    "embodied" and "interest-bearing" subjects, to
    reveal and reflect on the subjectivities of these
    thinking participants is also vital in social
    studies and citizenship education.

58
Reconstructing of a Framework of Critical
Thinking for Liberal Studies
  • Criticality means critique on the objects of
    inquiry Critically thinking about social and
    political issues in the teaching of social
    studies and citizenship education should advance
    beyond logical validity of argumentative claim
    and penetrate to the power relations
    hypostatized, ideological configurations frozen,
    and systemic distortions legitimatized underlying
    the social and political phenomena in point.

59
Reconstructing of a Framework of Critical
Thinking for Liberal Studies
  • Criticality means critical practice of social
    "re-writing" and transforming The last meaning
    of criticality in critical thinking points to the
    liberating and transformative potentiality in
    critical thinking instruction. Critical thinking
    instruction should not be stay at the level of
    contemplating and it should entail actions. In
    social studies and citizenship education, it
    signifies initiations of social and
    participations which may lead to improvement and
    transformation of social and political phenomena
    in point.

60
Topic 8 Understanding the Curriculum Aim of
Liberal Studies How Critical is Critical
Thinking? End
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