ArticleCity.com - free articles for reprint.

SEARCH

SITE MENU

CATEGORIES

Keyword Search


Article Title
Author's Name


"Critical Thinking" Is Often Just a Dumb Slogan
 by: Bruce Deitrick Price




The goal of education has always been to achieve critical thinking.

Needless to say, this involves a two-step process: first, students learn a great deal about a topic, whether in history, science or art; then they learn to arrange the information in new ways, to set one fact against another, to find new insights among this knowledge.

Not anymore. Today’s educators are in a hurry; they don’t bother with the first step. They jump directly to step two. In this scenario, students who know nothing are expected to talk intelligently about it. What absurdity.

Having just heard about X, can you discuss X? For example, the Ottoman Empire, its rise and fall? If you are like me, you know nothing about this complex subject. We will seem completely goofy if we discuss it. Talk about plunging self-esteem. Try chatting about the Ottoman Empire when you know nothing about it.

Far from empowering our students, this upside-down approach just makes them feel foolish and inadequate.

Today’s educators have many dogmas, perhaps the chief of which is that students need not memorize (that is, know) anything. Everyone must have an empty head. But that’s not bad enough. Then the educators want to add charade on top of ignorance. Students are suppose to engage in deep and meaningful thinking about all the things they don’t know.

My impression is that our educators disdain basics and academics equally. All facts are a nuisance; any knowledge is undesirable. But this approach, even in ed circles, might seem somewhat difficult to defend. So they airbrush on a whole layer of lies and distractions. They commence the cover-up...Look, parents, at all the critical thinking! The creative thinking! Your children are so much more advanced now, so much more liberated. Without all that silly knowledge stuff, today’s students can soar! They can see new things, things that no one saw before, because their vision is not obscured by facts.

Sure, I’m being a little satiric. I know you want to ask, What’s the point? Because you and I know that our educators are immune to satire. These are people who tell ignorant students that a class will now engage in critical thinking, and then they stand the there and pretend that it is happening. Shazam!

It's probably futile but I want to sketch (if only for parents and children) what should be standard operating procedure. Starting in the first grade, students learn the basics in each subject. This foundation is added to in the second grade, the third-grade, the fourth grade, and the fifth grade. As children enter middle school, more reflection is appropriate. Meanwhile, more facts are learned. At this point we can honestly say that children are engaged in some degree of critical thinking.

The goal, as they move closer to college, is to engage in more and more critical thinking. Students will know what they’re doing. If they are genuinely engaged in critical thinking, they will be proud of themselves, they will want to do more. But if the so-called critical thinking is a game whereby schools place camouflage over the ignorance of the student body, the students will know this and they will be ashamed.

Footnote: the author's new book THE EDUCATION ENIGMA explains why our educational establishment is so fond of empty fads.


About The Author

Bruce Deitrick Price is a novelist, artist, poet and education activist. He is the founder of http://www.Improve-Education.org and the author of THE EDUCATION ENIGMA--What Happened To American Education. THE EDUCATION ENIGMA is available on Amazon; or have your local store or library order it.

 


Julia Butterfly Hill on Hope Committed to Action

The Congo Crisis in Central Africa

Learn About Rotational Symmetry

The Dangers of Flooding in Sacramento Part 3/4

 

<< Back to "Education" Index


Disclaimer: The information presented and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors
and do not necessarily represent the views of ArticleCity.com and/or its partners.



Search || Bulk Article Submission || Submit An Article || Syndicate Articles
Free Videos || Advertising|| Home || Privacy Policy
Terms of Use || Link To Us || Site Map || Contact Us

This site uses Thumbshots previews