Teaching Critical Thinking in Psychology: A Handbook of Best Practices

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Chapter 4


Are They Ready Yet? Developmental


Issues in Teaching Thinking


Laird R. O. Edman


The differences among students can be one of the great joys of teaching, but these


differences are also probably the most difficult pedagogical problem facing all classroom


teachers, regardless of level of instruction. The issue becomes clear to us fairly quickly,


usually before the first formal assessment. We can tell by the questions students ask, the


answers they give to our questions, and even by the attention they pay and nods of assent


they give to what we are doing. Once we give the first test or students hand in their first


paper, our intuitions are usually confirmed: some students are with us and some aren’t; some


students “get it” and some don’t; we seem to be teaching some students and missing others.


Our classrooms are filled with students of widely differing cognitive abilities, learning


approaches, educational backgrounds, and motivations to learn. The diverse reactions stu-


dents provide are puzzling. The bimodal nature of our teacher–course evaluations bears


this out as we read comments from some students who praise us and others who berate us


for the very same teaching approach. Some students claim our course changed their lives


while others claim it was a waste of time. And our students’ ability to respond to our


attempts to nurture critical thinking is at least as multimodal as their disparate perform-


ances on our tests and other assignments. Trying to teach students to think like psycholo-


gists, rather than simply to memorize what psychologists think, can be a frustrating


enterprise. Perhaps we need a clearer idea of what we are trying to accomplish and the


developmental issues implicated in those goals.


Definitions and Taxonomies


To teach students to be effective critical thinkers requires one to have a clear conception of


critical thinking. The pedagogical need for a clear conception of critical thinking may seem


to be obvious, but many faculty, psychology departments, and colleges and universities


Teaching Critical Thinking in Psychology: A Handbook of Best Practices Edited by D. S. Dunn, J. S. Halonen, and R. A. Smith


© 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. ISBN: 978-1-405-17402-2

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