I think Clare unintentionally brings up an interesting point - using specific content to teach critical thinking presents inherent dangers.
Teachers all have agendas. It's inescapable - either we want to teach anthropogenic climate change as being factual, or it's a swindle, or we're somewhere in between. We want to show homeopathy as bunk or a useful form of medication.
Even away from controversial topics, teachers present information that may be wrong. I'm certainly not immune from it and have realised a few times that I've been teaching a process incorrectly, mostly because of a misunderstanding. There are a dozens of kids who grew into adults with a misconception thanks to me, and I like to pride myself on doing my homework.
Critical thinking cannot come down to a single teacher's pedagogy. It cannot be taught using content, and it cannot be taught by tricking kids, showing them 'self-evident bs' or role-modeling situations where a teacher is right and others are wrong. It cannot be unitised in a curriculum, mandated within a specific program by governments or communicated as a buzz-word.
It has disheartened me for years that whenever threads like this one show up, a large percentage of advice offered by skeptical teachers is based on speculation and nonsense, and conflicts with pedagogy I've spent years educating myself on. It's sad because the passion for change is there, but the willingness to learn how to do it properly is not. Skeptics are quick to say what needs to be done but ironically are unwilling to educate themselves on something they feel they know intimately without having done their homework. Perhaps the most pathetic moment was when somebody within the JREF said they believed there was no difference between education and communication. That from a foundation which calls itself educational!
With all that said, quixotecoyote's example above should be heeded. It's a great way to teach critical thinking - group work without a focus on a specific agenda, practicing evaluation of information in a positive, encouraging light, with the teacher role modeling. Quixote, from the Athon School of Critical Thinking you get five gold stars.
Sorry for the rant, folks, but the frustration does well up sometimes.
Athon
Teachers all have agendas. It's inescapable - either we want to teach anthropogenic climate change as being factual, or it's a swindle, or we're somewhere in between. We want to show homeopathy as bunk or a useful form of medication.
Even away from controversial topics, teachers present information that may be wrong. I'm certainly not immune from it and have realised a few times that I've been teaching a process incorrectly, mostly because of a misunderstanding. There are a dozens of kids who grew into adults with a misconception thanks to me, and I like to pride myself on doing my homework.
Critical thinking cannot come down to a single teacher's pedagogy. It cannot be taught using content, and it cannot be taught by tricking kids, showing them 'self-evident bs' or role-modeling situations where a teacher is right and others are wrong. It cannot be unitised in a curriculum, mandated within a specific program by governments or communicated as a buzz-word.
It has disheartened me for years that whenever threads like this one show up, a large percentage of advice offered by skeptical teachers is based on speculation and nonsense, and conflicts with pedagogy I've spent years educating myself on. It's sad because the passion for change is there, but the willingness to learn how to do it properly is not. Skeptics are quick to say what needs to be done but ironically are unwilling to educate themselves on something they feel they know intimately without having done their homework. Perhaps the most pathetic moment was when somebody within the JREF said they believed there was no difference between education and communication. That from a foundation which calls itself educational!
With all that said, quixotecoyote's example above should be heeded. It's a great way to teach critical thinking - group work without a focus on a specific agenda, practicing evaluation of information in a positive, encouraging light, with the teacher role modeling. Quixote, from the Athon School of Critical Thinking you get five gold stars.
Sorry for the rant, folks, but the frustration does well up sometimes.
Athon