Some critical thinking strategies
1. Reflection:
- engage in the reflective process. (See unit, 'Reflective learning/keeping a reflective learning journal').
2. Rationality:
- rely on reason rather than emotion
- require evidence, ignore no known evidence, and follow evidence where it leads
- be concerned more with finding the best explanation than being right
- analyse apparent confusion and ask questions.
3. Self-awareness:
- weigh the influences of motives and bias
- recognise our own assumptions, prejudices, biases, or point of view.
4. Honesty:
- to think critically we must recognise emotional impulses,
selfish motives, disreputable purposes, or other modes of
self-deception.
5. Open-mindedness:
- evaluate all reasonable inferences
- consider a variety of possible viewpoints or perspectives
- remain open to alternative interpretations
- accept a new explanation, model, or paradigm
because it explains the evidence better, is simpler, or has fewer
inconsistencies or covers more data
- accept new priorities in response to a reevaluation of the evidence or reassessment of our real interests
- do not reject unpopular views out of hand.
6. Discipline:
- be precise, meticulous, comprehensive, and exhaustive
- engage in active listening and reading practices
(See the units, ‘Active listening: note-taking in
lectures’, and, ‘Active and critical reading’)
- resist manipulation and irrational appeals
- avoid snap judgments.
7. Judgment:
- recognise the relevance and/or merit of alternative assumptions and perspectives
- recognise the extent and weight of evidence.
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