Ladewig
I lost an avatar bet.
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2001
- Messages
- 28,828
I'm a college professor, currently teaching. I agree with you in the main, but allow me a few modifications from my standpoint.
Not much formal instruction in critical thinking and logic happens in college: actual classes in critical thinking and logic may be offered but are usually not required. Informally, a lot of instruction in critical thinking and logic (probably more applied, less theoretical) goes on, but there is some instruction in which the opposite of critical thinking happens.
I think the stronger impact comes from general education classes and the general broadening of one's outlook. Students are trained in *beginning* to understand how limited and parochial their perspective can be.
Might part of the reason also be that in writing term papers, theses, and the such, students are required to provide sources? President Trump makes crap up so badly that it is obvious there is no underlying evidence. Of course, my question about such an unsupported theory would relate to the current situation rather than the history of this trend.
