Infusing thinking skills into Key Stages 3 and 4
In the current context in England, infusion of teaching thinking into subject teaching
promises to be the most effective model of implementation. There are a number of
ways in which this can be approached:
- using the Cognitive Acceleration through Science Education (CASE) or
Cognitive Acceleration in Mathematics Education (CAME) programmes
integrates the major principles of teaching thinking into lessons; for example,
challenge (or cognitive conflict), collaborative talk and metacognition
(www.kcl.ac.uk/kings_college/depsta/education/teaching/CASE.html and
http://www.kcl.ac.uk/depsta/education/came.html)) (see also unit 2, section 2); - adopting an approach such as Philosophy for Children, which is an excellent
vehicle for promoting questioning, listening, collaboration and reasoning, and
very valuable in English and the humanities subjects (www.sapere.net); - using teaching ‘strategies’ as found in the Leading in Learninginitiative, such as
Reading images, Summarising, Analogies, and Audience and Purpose. With
this approach it is important to maintain a focus on the five National Curriculum
thinking skills.
9 | Key Stage 3 National Strategy| Pedagogy and practice
Unit 16: Leading in learning
© Crown copyright 2004
DfES 0439-2004
Enquiry
Ask questions
Pose problems
Plan what to do
Predict outcomes
Improve ideas
Creative thinking
Generate and extend ideas
Hypothesise
Look for alternatives
Apply imagination
Evaluation
Develop criteria
Weigh information