Teaching Critical Thinking in Psychology: A Handbook of Best Practices

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Jane S. Halonen


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In contrast with truly fine programs that exist today in many psychology graduate


programs, mine didn’t provide much preparation for what an academic career might entail.


At least I like to blame the absence of career preparation to explain why I failed to respond


very gracefully when my dean at Alverno, who happened to be a psychologist/historian,


offered me an opportunity of a lifetime after I had been teaching for just one year. This


episode leads us to the first of several crucial ideas that will enable new faculty members to


optimize their critical thinking practices:


Big Idea #1: When your dean or chair asks you to do something, suspend criticality; it could be


life-changing.


My academic dean, Austin Doherty, had pulled together a grant-writing team to capture


support from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE). Their


goal was to address the disturbing report Nation at Risk (National Commission on


Excellence in Education, 1983), which had concluded that colleges and universities were


failing in their responsibilities. (If this sounds familiar, a similar theme has been addressed


more recently in the higher education bestseller, Declining by Degrees, Hersch & Merrow,


2005.) In response to the criticism, Alverno convened four disciplines to discuss and


disseminate strategies for the promotion of critical thinking in the classroom. The Dean


asked me to select and coordinate a group of 10 psychologists who would come to


Milwaukee and debate what strategies and frameworks could shed some light on how best


to teach psychology students to think critically about behavior.


Early in the discussions, the specter of critical thinking assessment reared its head. At


the outset of the discussion, I recall that one of our members referred to himself jokingly


as the “Johnny Appleseed” of critical thinking. He shared that he saw his role as “planting


the seed” of critical thinking that would fully flower much later in the student’s career.


Sadly, he had resigned himself to the idea that he wouldn’t be able to observe directly the


fruits of his labor. Although I was a relative neophyte in teaching, that comment struck me


as unimaginative and perhaps even irresponsible. Why couldn’t we develop teaching strat-


egies that would allow us to measure the impact more immediately? Much of my academic


writing has been devoted to addressing that question.


My favorite memory from the FIPSE experience still informs my teaching and leads to


Big Idea #2. Bruce Henderson from Western Carolina University in an exuberant moment


suggested ...


Big Idea #2: Why study psychology? So you won’t be a jerk!


I refer to this observation as the überoutcome of psychology. If we deconstruct the state-


ment, it reveals a lot about what end states we seek for our students. Avoiding jerk status


means, among other things:



Practicing amiable skepticism


Seeking evidence to support what we think or believe (Halonen & Gray, 2001)


Understanding the perspectives of others
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