Thinking critically about critical thinking in higher education


Autoria(s): Lloyd, Margaret M.; Bahr, Nan
Data(s)

02/07/2010

Resumo

The literature on critical thinking in higher education is constructed around the fundamental assumption that, while regarded as essential, is neither clearly or commonly understood. There is elsewhere evidence that academics and students have differing perceptions of what happens in university classrooms, particularly in regard to higher order thinking. This paper reports on a small-scale investigation in a Faculty of Education at an Australian University into academic and student definitions and understandings of critical thinking. Our particular interest lay in the consistencies and disconnections assumed to exist between academic staff and students. The presumption might therefore be that staff and students perceive critical thinking in different ways and that this may limit its achievement as a critical graduate attribute. The key finding from this study, contrary to extant findings, is that academics and students did share substantively similar definitions and understandings of critical thinking.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/33053/

Publicador

Georgia Southern University

Relação

http://academics.georgiasouthern.edu/ijsotl/v4n2/articles/PDFs/_LloydBahr.pdf

Lloyd, Margaret M. & Bahr, Nan (2010) Thinking critically about critical thinking in higher education. International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 4(2).

Fonte

Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #139900 OTHER EDUCATION #critical thinking #preservice teacher education #HERN
Tipo

Journal Article