Enhancing Critical Thinking Skills for Undergraduate Students

Slide Note
Embed
Share

Explore the essence of critical thinking, developing a questioning mindset, understanding arguments, and effective reading strategies for academic texts to excel in assignments. Embrace originality, valid arguments, and informed perspectives in your academic journey.


Uploaded on Sep 18, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Critical Thinking for Undergrads DCU Student Learning

  2. Learning Aims 1. What is Being Critical? 2. Critical Thinking in Assignments 3. What s an Argument? 4. Getting What You Need from What You Read

  3. Being a Critical Student Developing a questioning attitude towards what you read Looking for alternatives in what you read: Asking why/how something happens Asking why something is important Asking ??

  4. Critical Cycle

  5. Being Critical In Assignments - Show understanding of topic (ie) relevant reading and summarise main points, key information - Apply knowledge (ie) select only relevant information - Original ideas (ie) your analysis of topic - Valid argument (ie) your position on topic, supported by evidence; egs consider a range of views

  6. Whats an Argument? Academic essays usually require an argument You are being asked to present your position on the essay topic and to support your position with reasons

  7. Is It An Argument? Genetic Engineering really worries me. I don t think it should be allowed That doesn t convince me. I think genetic engineering is really exciting

  8. Is it an argument? Genetic engineering should be curtailed because there hasn t been sufficient research into what happens when new varieties are created without natural predators to hold them in check

  9. Reading Academic Texts Different types of reading strategies for different texts: Novels, Magazines Website Info Academic Texts: Critical Reading Purpose a specific objective Selective focused on questions Active effective, targeted, motivated

  10. Critical reading Is a technique for discovering information and ideas in a text Involves reading with a purpose: to fully understand the merits and limitations of what a text says and does

  11. Active Reading Strategies Your notes should identify 1. What is said: what is the argument (what are you being asked to accept as true) 2. What examples are given: what does the text focus on, how is the topic narrowed down 3. What kind of evidence is supplied: what citations/authorities, samples/ cases, when/timeframe etc

  12. Critical v Descriptive Reading Non-critical reading restates text (ie) examines what a text says Descriptive reading examines what a text does Critical reading evaluates or interprets the text

  13. Your doctor tells you to eat less chocolate and drink less beer A restatement would repeat the statement: The doctor said I should eat less chocolate & drink less beer. A description would describe the remark: The doctor advised me to change my diet An evaluation/interpretation would find underlying meaning: The doctor warned me to reduce my calories for the sake of my health Evaluation attempts to find the significance of the text (eg) that the foods mentioned are high calorie

  14. Follow-Up Workshop Next Semester: Moving From Descriptive Writing To Critical Writing Critical Reading is the first step to writing critically!

Related


More Related Content