Critical Thinking

Working through problems and becoming a critical thinker are important life skills, essential for college and career success. The resources and activities in this section introduce students to traditional and current types of critical thinking and help them reflect on these skills, including deductive reasoning, distinguishing between facts and opinions, thinking through the problem solving steps, and identifying barriers that move us away from reason and critical thought, including biases. 

Students should be able to:

  1. Describe the problem solving method and apply the method to various scenarios;
  2. Define critical thinking and explain how decision making and understanding one’s, biases applies to college, career, and life situations; 
  3. Distinguish between fact and opinion by verifying information; 
  4. Create thoughtful questions to provoke engaging discussion, and
  5. Recognize a syllogism and test whether or not it leads to logical conclusions.
  1. How would you define critical thinking? What are some examples from your academic and personal life that exemplify times when you’ve used critical thinking? 
  2. How can you tell the difference between a factual statement and an opinion? How would I determine whether it is or is not true?
  3. What is an expert? Name some examples of people that you consider to be an expert. 
  4. What are some examples of biased thinking that you’ve encountered? 
  5. Does my sense of identity in any way depend on the supposed truth of my assumption? What are the implications of that?