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                <p><a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1014/p18s01-lehl.html" target="_blank"><font color="#FFFFFF"><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">Rethinking 
                  thinking:&nbsp; College classes that make one think - it's a 
                  basic concept assumed as a given. But many grads walk away with 
                  a diploma yet still lack critical-thinking skills. That's why 
                  some educators are asking students to close their textbooks 
                  and do a little more reflecting.<br>
                  </font></b></font></a><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>by 
                  Mark Clayton<br>
                  The Christian Science Monitor</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>While 
                  pondering a problem in a plant biology course at Ohio University 
                  one semester, John Withers suddenly realized something unusual 
                  was going on: This class was actually requiring him to think.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Thinking 
                  is presumed to be the bread and butter of higher education. 
                  Beyond simply getting a diploma to land a job that pays well, 
                  the promise of sharpening thinking skills still looms as a key 
                  reason millions apply to college.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Yet 
                  some say there is a remarkable paucity of critical thinking 
                  taught at the undergraduate level - even though the need for 
                  such skills seems more urgent than ever.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Americans 
                  can now expect to change jobs as many as a half-dozen times 
                  in their lives - a feat requiring considerable mental agility. 
                  The ability to sift, analyze, and reflect upon large amounts 
                  of data is crucial in today's information age.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Yet 
                  a major national report released last year entitled &quot;Greater 
                  Expectations: A New Vision for Learning as a Nation Goes to 
                  College&quot; raises serious questions as to whether undergraduates 
                  are absorbing these essential skills.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Outsiders 
                  who find college graduates unprepared for solving problems in 
                  the workplace question whether the colleges are successfully 
                  educating their student to think,&quot; the report notes.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Critical 
                  thought certainly receives considerable lip service on many 
                  campuses. College websites beckon students to &quot;learn to 
                  think critically.&quot; Classes with &quot;critical thinking&quot; 
                  in the title are abundant.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>But 
                  Carol Schneider, president of the Association of American Colleges 
                  and Universities in Washington isn't convinced.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Critical 
                  thinking, social responsibility, reflective judgment, and evidence-based 
                  reasoning ... are the most enduring goals of a first-rate liberal 
                  education,&quot; says Ms. Schneider. Yet research shows &quot;many 
                  college graduates are falling short in reaching these goals.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>That's 
                  why some college faculty are leading the charge to move the 
                  teaching of thinking skills out of isolated courses and into 
                  all classes. Much as writing is now often taught as part of 
                  every discipline, they argue, learning to think ought to be 
                  the goal of every class.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>In 
                  the case of Mr. Withers's biology class, that's exactly what 
                  his professor, Sarah Wyatt, was aiming at.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Inspired 
                  by an initiative at Ohio University in Athens - where she was 
                  teaching - to focus harder on teaching students critical thinking 
                  skills, she directed her class to turn away temporarily from 
                  the usual round of textbooks, lectures, notes, and tests.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>She 
                  asked them instead to break into teams and work to develop original 
                  hypotheses of a plant's development.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>As 
                  Withers and his group began designing an experiment to test 
                  their hypothesis, they were forced to reconsider methods and 
                  conclusions.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>What 
                  flaws and limits might be embedded in their approach? What could 
                  they know with certainty? What could they not know?</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>It 
                  was a challenging mental exercise, and as a result, Withers 
                  found he began thinking about biology outside class with more 
                  clarity, precision, and reflection than ever before.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>At 
                  the University of Massachusetts in Boston, Esther Kingston-Mann 
                  is interested in training her students to think like historians 
                  rather than biologists.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>But 
                  her goal of encouraging her students to do their own thinking 
                  is similar to that of Professor Wyatt's.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Like 
                  Wyatt, she has her students occasionally close their textbooks. 
                  In her course on the cold war, she asks them to read newspaper 
                  accounts instead.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>They 
                  scan articles dating from the &quot;red scare&quot; in the 1920s 
                  on through World War II and then read further new accounts of 
                  relations between the US and the Soviet Union in later decades.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Later 
                  they collaborate in small groups, trying to identify in the 
                  newspaper clippings the voices being used to tell the story 
                  at a particular moment - and to note which perspectives and 
                  voices are missing.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;They're 
                  looking directly at the newspapers and not at a textbook,&quot; 
                  she says. &quot;They find it difficult, but they end up liking 
                  it, and they feel more confident intellectually.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>It's 
                  all part of asking students to hone their own thinking skills, 
                  rather than simply allowing them to absorb and repeat the material 
                  they find in their textbooks or absorb from lectures.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Unless 
                  the professor creates a situation where students are required 
                  to reflect explicitly on an issue, says Professor Kingston-Mann, 
                  &quot;they don't necessarily carry it anywhere else; it's just 
                  'something I took in that class.' &quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Yet 
                  some say efforts like these are still the exception on many 
                  campuses - despite a decades-long discussion on the need for 
                  critical thought in higher education.<br>
                  Buzz word of the '80s</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>At 
                  least since the 1970s, some college faculty have been calling 
                  for higher education to refocus on the &quot;liberal learning&quot; 
                  model espoused by John Dewey.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>The 
                  philosopher argued that teaching students to be learners was 
                  the whole point of education. His belief that good thinkers 
                  make good citizens also seemed an apt message for the times.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Indeed, 
                  many seemed ready - even eager to inject critical thinking much 
                  more deliberately into higher education. Critical thinking became 
                  a 1980s buzzword in academe. Sometime in the 1990s, it lost 
                  its buzz - not because it was rejected, but because it was adopted 
                  wholesale.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Professors 
                  today often believe erroneously that they are already teaching 
                  critical thinking in their courses and that students are absorbing 
                  it.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>But 
                  that's not necessarily the case, says Richard Paul, president 
                  of the Center for Critical Thinking and author of &quot;Critical 
                  Thinking: How to Prepare Students for a Rapidly Changing World.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>At 
                  the request of California's Commission on Teacher Credentialing, 
                  Dr. Paul and his colleagues in 1995 conducted interviews with 
                  faculty at 83 public and 28 private colleges and universities 
                  in California.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>The 
                  professors were asked specifically how they taught students 
                  to think critically.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;The 
                  basic conclusion we came to is that while everyone claims to 
                  be teaching critical thinking ... the evidence is that very 
                  few can articulate what they mean by it or explain how they 
                  emphasize it on a typical day,&quot; Dr. Paul says. &quot;It's 
                  something everyone wants to believe they are doing.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>But 
                  if not teaching thinking, then what are colleges doing?</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Patricia 
                  King and her colleagues in educational psychology at the University 
                  of Michigan have spent the last 25 years conducting experiments 
                  to assess the degree to which college produces &quot;reflective 
                  judgment&quot; and higher-order thinking skills in undergraduates.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>The 
                  good news, she says, is that an increase in critical thinking 
                  appears to be a direct outcome of attending college. The bad 
                  news is that even by the time they graduate, most college students 
                  don't reach the higher levels of critical thinking involving 
                  true reflective judgment.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;They're 
                  making what we call quasi- reflective judgments,&quot; she says. 
                  &quot;Even four years of college only brings traditional-age 
                  college students to a very low level of critical thinking and 
                  judgment,&quot; she says.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Seniors 
                  do have the ability to understand that a controversial problem 
                  can and should be approached from several perspectives, she 
                  says. But they are often unable to come to a reasoned conclusion 
                  even when all the facts to solve a problem are present.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;They're 
                  left on the fence,&quot; she says. &quot;They say, 'Look how 
                  open-minded I am.' But when pressed to say, 'What do you think 
                  about this? What suggestions would you make and what are they 
                  based on?' - that's when the process falls apart. They are unable 
                  to reach or defend a conclusion that's most reasonable and consistent 
                  with the facts.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Pressure 
                  for colleges to cultivate critical thinking is growing, however, 
                  as state legislatures interested in accountability press educators 
                  to determine what kind of learning an undergraduate diploma 
                  represents.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Margaret 
                  Miller, a University of Virginia professor and director of the 
                  National Forum on College Level Learning, is leading the charge 
                  to measure what students at state-funded colleges know and can 
                  do, including an assessment of intellectual skills. She worries 
                  that critical-thinking skills are not truly valued by many state 
                  schools and their students.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Students 
                  and institutions are more and more focused on the vocational 
                  - at a high level, but vocational nonetheless,&quot; she says. 
                  &quot;But producing a group of non- reflective highly competent 
                  technicians is something we want to avoid if we want a functioning 
                  society.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Because 
                  the curriculum is so fragmented across many narrow disciplines, 
                  students have a greater challenge in making sense of it. That 
                  means colleges can't just ghettoize critical thinking in a few 
                  courses, but need to spread the focus on thinking across the 
                  curriculum.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;All 
                  disciplines need to become more liberal-arts-like in their focus 
                  on the intellectual skills that underlie what they do,&quot; 
                  she says. &quot;Some of that is critical thinking, some of it 
                  is broader and encompasses that.&quot;<br>
                  Cultivating open-mindedness</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>If 
                  undergraduates aren't learning to think, one major reason may 
                  be that most higher education institutions don't know how to 
                  systematically teach it, says Elizabeth Minnich, professor of 
                  philosophy at the Union Institute and University in Cincinnati.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>In 
                  an article last month entitled &quot;Teaching Thinking: Moral 
                  and Political Considerations&quot; in Change magazine, a higher-education 
                  publication, she argues that thinking can and should be taught 
                  more deliberately and intentionally in college courses.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>She 
                  then goes on to describe the kind of thought process she most 
                  values.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Thinking 
                  is neither coerced nor coercive,&quot; she writes. &quot;It 
                  is exploratory, suggestive; it does not prove anything, or finally 
                  arrive anywhere. Thus, to say people are 'thoughtful' or 'thought-provoking' 
                  suggests that they are open-minded, reflective, challenging 
                  - more likely to question than to assert, inclined to listen 
                  to many sides, capable of making distinctions that hold differences 
                  in play rather than dividing in order to exclude, and desirous 
                  of persuading others rather than reducing them to silence by 
                  refuting them.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Rather 
                  than trying to &quot;cover the material&quot; in a class and 
                  force-feed terms and concepts to undergraduates, she says in 
                  an interview that she tries to cultivate open-mindedness, reflection, 
                  and a questioning attitude.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>She 
                  might, for instance, begin a class using Plato's Republic as 
                  an occasion for &quot;thinking practice.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Before 
                  the students are even assigned to read the Republic, she explains 
                  to her class the confusing mixture of tongues and nationalities 
                  Socrates and his friends would encounter at the port of Athens. 
                  For help, they turned to an old man, Cephalus, to ask questions.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Then 
                  I ask the students, 'To whom would you take a question raised 
                  for you by an encounter with people(s) whose differences suddenly 
                  make you unsure of your own, hitherto unquestioned, values? 
                  Would you take it to an old person? A religious authority? A 
                  political leader? Your mother or father? A scientist? A friend?' 
                  &quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Rather 
                  than just downloading content of the Republic, she wants to 
                  be sure &quot;the students are bringing something to it.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>The 
                  idea is that the students then begin to read Plato as if reading 
                  it through the lens of their own experience.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>She 
                  often asks at some point: &quot;What would you do if you were 
                  an Aristotelian? How would you see that tree, or how would you 
                  listen to your friend when they are trying to tell you their 
                  problem?&quot;<br>
                  'Hey, I'm already doing that'</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>There 
                  are, of course, a number of liberal arts college and a few public 
                  universities that consciously pursue critical thinking across 
                  the curriculum.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>George 
                  Nagel is a professor of communications at Ferris State University, 
                  just north of Grand Rapids, Mich.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;I 
                  was pretty skeptical, probably a little cynical, like a lot 
                  of our faculty,&quot; he says. &quot;I had the attitude [three 
                  years ago] - 'Hey, I'm already doing that and doing it well.' 
                  But it's funny, when you ask [the faculty] what they're doing 
                  so well, they can't really explicate it for you.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Now 
                  he and a growing number of faculty on campus are warming to 
                  the idea of specifically and intentionally teaching critical 
                  thinking in every discipline. Professor Nagel has received training 
                  from the Center for Critical Thinking in Dillon, Calif., and 
                  is now teaching others at Ferris to do the same.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>But 
                  such notions are not always immediately welcomed on campus.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>At 
                  Ohio University, Wyatt at first had to buck the tide of opinion 
                  among some colleagues when she retooled her courses to focus 
                  on critical thinking.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;What 
                  I'm doing is different than what normally is done,&quot; she 
                  says. &quot;When I first started, people said that's going to 
                  be a lot more work and students won't get it. This is the way 
                  you do lab: You run the lab, the cook book, and this is what 
                  you get.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Today, 
                  instead of being in the academic doghouse, Dr. Wyatt finds her 
                  thinking-based classes are a hit - popular with both students 
                  and a growing number of faculty who believe she offers something 
                  of genuine value.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;They 
                  like the product we're turning out,&quot; she says, &quot;kids 
                  who are actually thinkers.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b><font color="#FFFFFF"><a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1014/p18s01-lehl.html" target="_blank"><br>
                  http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1014/p18s01-lehl.html</a></font></b></font></p>
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//2007-05-04: moon
google_ad_channel = "9112757656";
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google_ad_channel = "9112757656";
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<font size="1" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><a href="http://www.waywild.com/" target="_blank">WAY<font color="#CC0000">WILD</font>WEB.com Domain Name Registration, Website Design, Domain Transfers, Full Service Web Hosting.<br>
Go WAY<font color="#CC0000">WILD</font> for All Your Freedom of Expression Web Needs!</a></font>
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