Teaching Critical Thinking in Psychology: A Handbook of Best Practices

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Kevin J. Apple et al.


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their recommendations for a guiding list of learning goals and outcomes for an under-


graduate psychology major (Halonen et al., 2002). Specifically, the Task Force proposed a


list of 10 goals to reflect the learning expectations that students should achieve by the


completion of an undergraduate degree in psychology. Most notable for the current


chapter was the inclusion of Goal 3 (Critical Thinking) as one of the important 10 goals


to promote in our undergraduate training.


Jane Halonen, who served as both the chair of the Task Force on Undergraduate


Psychology Major Competencies and the chair of JMU’s psychology department, chal-


lenged and partnered with our assessment committee to develop an assessment tool to


measure student growth on all 10 goals. This challenge led to the development of an APA


undergraduate learning goal self-reflection exercise that incorporated a mixed-method


approach (Creswell, 2002), enabling us to collect quantitative and qualitative data on each


of the 10 goals. We provided students a brief definition of each goal and a list of example


learning outcomes associated with that goal. Then to obtain quantitative data, students


rated how strongly they agreed that they had achieved each goal and rated how strongly


they thought JMU’s undergraduate psychology program provided opportunities to achieve


each goal. Next, to obtain qualitative data, we asked students to offer open-ended feed-


back explaining their quantitative ratings for each goal and to list particular experiences or


recommendations that they had to help achieve this goal. (See Appendix 1 for the general


directions for the APA goal self-reflection exercise and Appendix 2 for how the critical


thinking goal was presented to participants.)


Based on the quantitative data from the self-assessment, students agreed that they had


achieved Goal 3 (Critical Thinking). Specifically, students in 2004 (M = 4.38, SD = .76)


and in 2005 (M = 4.19, SD = .77) rated their agreement with the first question (“I think


that I achieved this goal”) quite high. Similarly, an inspection of students’ responses to the


second statement (“JMU’s psychology program provided opportunities to achieve this


goal”) revealed a similar pattern. Students in 2004 (M = 4.17, SD = .95) and in 2005


(M = 4.10, SD = .85) rated strong agreement with this statement.


We should note that our students did not rate all 10 goals as favorably as Goal 3 (Critical


Thinking). As a result, we used students’ lower ratings on other goals to motivate a number


of changes to our undergraduate program. Specifically, we added new courses to our cur-


riculum to help students achieve the goals that they rated low. In addition to highlighting


which areas of our curriculum are in need of improvement, another benefit to assessing


the self-reflection exercise on APA goals each year is that we can use the quantitative data


to track whether changes to the program are having the intended impact of increasing


students’ ratings in subsequent years.


In addition, the qualitative data for the APA self-reflection exercise have provided us


great insight into understanding how our curriculum impacts learning on each goal, like


Goal 3 (Critical Thinking). When coding the open-ended data, we followed Creswell’s


(2002) recommendations of first reading through the text, dividing the text into more


meaningful segments, labeling each text segment with a one or two word code, and reduc-


ing the number of codes into overarching themes. In our first pass through the Goal 3


(Critical Thinking) data, we noticed a general trend where students’ comments were


positive, negative, or mixed about our department’s ability to promote critical thinking.


For example,

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