1. ATP â14 Paperclips and Toasters:
Critical Thinking in Psychology.
Jamie Davies
How many uses
can you think
of for a
paper
clip?
2. Outcome Type Things
By the end of the session participants:
⢠Should be able to describe what critical
thinking is.
⢠Have reflected on teaching critical thinking
skills.
⢠Should be able to describe what goes into a
toaster.
⢠Have discussed strategies to embed critical
thinking skills into the curriculum.
3. Knowing a great deal is not the
same as being smart;
intelligence is not information
alone but also judgment, the
manner in which information is
collected and used.
Carl Sagan
4. Critical thinking is the ability to think clearly and rationally. It
includes the ability to engage in reflective and independent
thinking.
- Analysing arguments, claims, or evidence
(Ennis, 1985; Facione, 1990; Halpern, 1998; Paul, 1992)
- Making inferences using inductive or deductive reasoning
(Ennis, 1985; Facione, 1990; Paul, 1992; Willingham, 2007)
- Judging or evaluating
(Case, 2005; Ennis, 1985; Facione, 1990; Lipman, 1988)
- Making decisions or solving problems
(Ennis, 1985; Halpern, 1998; Willingham, 2007).
(Lai, 2011)
5. How to make a piece of toast?
Now, imagine you donât have a toaster âŚ
what would you do?
How could you make the
toast?
In small groups you have 90 seconds to
write a set of instructions as to how to
make the perfect piece of toast.
6. Left to his own
devices he
couldnât build a
toaster. He could
just about make
a sandwich and
that was it.Douglas Adams, Mostly Harmless, 1992
It takes an entire civilisation to build a toaster
14. CT | Criticisms of Psychology
1. Is psychology only common sense?
2. Do psychological theories provide new insight
into the human condition or do they document
the obvious?
3. Does psychology simply formalise what any
amateur already knows intuitively?
âDay after day social scientists go out into the world.
Day after day they discover that peopleâs behavior is
pretty much what youâd expect.â
Cullen Murphy, Editor, Atlantic Monthly (1990)
15. TASK
In pairs look at the conclusions
from Lazarsfeld (1949) and suggest
reasons for the findings of the
study.
What could have led to his
findings?
Do the conclusions make sense?
[5 minutes]
16. Paul Lazarsfeld (1949) | The American
Soldier - An Expository Review
1. Better educated soldiers suffered more
adjustment problems than less educated
soldiers.
2. Southern soldiers coped better with the hot
South Sea Island climate than Northern
soldiers.
3. White privates were more eager to be
promoted officers than Black privates.
4. As long as the fighting continued, soldiers
were more eager to return home than after
the war ended.
17. Paul Lazarsfeld (1949) | The American
Soldier - An Expository Review
1. Better educated soldiers suffered fewer
adjustment problems than less educated
soldiers.
2. Northern soldiers coped better with the hot
South Sea Island climate than Southern
soldiers.
3. White privates were less eager to be
promoted officers than Black privates.
4. After the war ended soldiers were more
eager to return home than when the fighting
continued.
18. âAnything seems commonplace,
once explainedâ
Dr. Watson to Sherlock Holmes
Hindsight Bias
1. âI knew it all along phenomenaââ the tendency to
perceive something as obvious or unavoidable, after
learning of the outcome.
2. Study of Hindsight bias: Teigen (1986)
⢠Evaluate actual proverbs and their opposites
Actual Proverb
⢠Fear is stronger than love.
⢠He that is fallen cannot help
him who is down.
⢠Wise men make proverbs and
fools repeat them.
Opposite
⢠Love is stronger than fear.
⢠He that is fallen can help him
who is down.
⢠Fools make proverbs and wise
men repeat them.
19. Discuss a CT class activity
How could you
embed critical
thinking into your
classroom
activities?
22. What is the quality of the evidence?
Could the relationship have happened by chance?
Is there a control or comparison group?
Is the conclusion causal using correlational data?
Are there any confounding variables?
Are we over generalising based on an
unrepresentative sample?
Are there any biases in the research or data collection methods?
Can you actually falsify the theory?
Is the study claiming to have found the answer?
23. â⌠science must begin with
myths, and with the criticism of
myths; neither with the collection
of observations, nor with the
invention of experiments, but
with the critical discussion of
myths, and of magical techniques
and practices.â
Popper (1963)
p66.
25. Developing opinions, judgements & decisions.
Critical thinking skills.
Separating a whole an examining itâs
component parts or features.
Using facts, rules, principles and applying them to
examples or to solve a problem.
Organisation and selection of facts, information
and knowledge.
Combining or organising information to form a
new whole or create something new.
Identification and recall of information. Also
known as Knowledge!
28. Why do we study the WEIRDest
people?
http://jamiedavies.co/weird
29.
30.
31. âKnowing a great deal is not the same as
being smart; intelligence is not
information alone but also judgment, the
manner in which information is collected
and usedâ
Carl Sagan
âsavvy consumers and
producers of researchâ
Sternberg