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About The Author  
Carol Fertig

Carol Fertig

I have been active in the education community for more than 40 years and involved in gifted education for more than 20 years. At various times, I have been a classroom teacher, gifted education teacher, consultant, writer, editor—you name it. I live in Colorado, but also spend a fair amount of time in Chicago. I have two grown boys: one in Colorado and one in California. In my spare time, I enjoy skiing, mountain biking, and golfing. I also like to read, go to plays, and watch foreign movies. Feel free to send me an e-mail.

I am also the author of Raising a Gifted Child: A Parenting Success Handbook. This book offers a large menu of strategies, resources, organizations, tips, and suggestions for parents to find optimal learning opportunities for their gifted kids, covering the gamut of talent areas, including academics, the arts, technology, creativity, music, and thinking skills.

Raising a Gifted Child

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Can Critical Thinking Really Be Taught?

 

The Washington Post published an interesting article this week on teaching critical thinking skills. The term seems to mean different things to different people. It might mean

  • reading deeper into what is written.
  • understanding why historical events happened, rather than simply memorizing facts.
  • using analysis, synthesis, application, and reflection.
  • discerning judgment.
All kinds of organizations are devoted to studying critical thinking.
 

According to the educational nonprofit group Foundation for Critical Thinking, a practiced critical thinker will

  • raise vital questions and problems, formulating them clearly and precisely.
  • gather and assess relevant information, using abstract ideas to interpret effectively.
  • reach well-reasoned conclusions and solutions and test them against relevant criteria and standards.
  • think open-mindedly within alternative systems of thought.
  • communicate effectively with others to solve complex problems.
A controversy seems to be whether critical thinking can be taught without content knowledge, and whether the skills can be transferred from one situation to another.
 
As Daniel T. Willingham, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia, says, “To understand the structure and the nature of poetry, you need to read a lot of poems. It’s the same thing with mathematics and science.”
 
Teachers and parents need to make certain that students know the difference between memorizing material and understanding it, that they are open to different ways of thinking, and that they learn as much as they can about as much as they can.
 
“The easiest way to encourage critical thinking is to force [students] to question everything,” said Michael Tabachnick, professor of physics at Delaware Valley College in Doylestown, PA, who teaches a course in it.
 
“Question me, question their parents, their pastor, everything,” he said. “It doesn't mean you can’t believe, but you must question. Is it true? Is it opinion? Is it justified by fact? . . . Students eventually learn to analyze. Some will do it better than others, but you can always get them to at least question.”
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