Engaging Ideas. John C. Bean

Engaging Ideas - John C. Bean


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See chapter 9 for suggestions on bringing more critical thinking into lectures and class discussions.Besides giving students good problems to think about, teachers need to critique students' performances and to model the kinds of critical thinking they want students to develop. This book suggests numerous ways that teachers can coach critical thinking, including critiquing solutions developed by small groups, guiding class discussions to deepen complexity, inviting alternative points of view, writing comments on student drafts, holding conferences, sharing their own autobiographical accounts of their own thinking and writing processes, discussing strengths and weaknesses of sample papers, breaking long assignments into stages, and stressing revision and multiple drafts. An equally important aspect of coaching critical thinking is to provide a supportive, open classroom that values the worth and dignity of all students. When students actively use a course's new concepts, ideas, and information to address authentic problems, they engage course material on a deep level.

      Step 5: Develop Strategies to Include Exploratory Writing, Talking, and Reflection in Your Courses

      Step 6: Develop Strategies for Teaching the Genres of Your Discipline and the Ways That These Genres Use Evidence to Support Claims

      Instructors in disciplinary courses hope not only to improve their students' critical thinking skills but also to teach them to think like disciplinary experts (to think like historians, psychologists, biologists, business managers, or nurses). To move from novice to expert in a given field, students must learn the discipline's ways of thinking, talking, and writing—what rhetoricians call the field's discourse community. Teachers can accelerate students' understanding of a field by designing assignments that teach students to write within the discipline's typical genres, such as experimental reports, ethnographies, recommendation memos, nursing care plans, design proposals, or field‐specific conference papers suitable for presentation at an undergraduate research conference.

      In a prototype paper in many of these genres, the writer typically uses evidence from discipline‐specific primary sources or data to add something new, surprising, or challenging to a conversation carried on within the discipline's secondary sources: “Some scholars have said X (literature review), but I am arguing Y (thesis to be supported by analysis of appropriate primary sources or data).”

      Step 7: When Assigning Formal Writing, Treat Writing as a Process

      In many courses, the student artifact that most fully exhibits critical thinking is a formal paper requiring analysis and argument as opposed to algorithmic calculations. Too often, however, what students submit as finished products are often simply edited rough drafts—the result of an undeveloped and often truncated thinking process that doesn't adequately examine all the available evidence, consider alternative views, develop ideas fully, or imagine the needs of a new reader. Students often avoid or truncate the messy writing process through which undeveloped and initially confusing ideas become gradually focused, deepened, and clarified through successive drafts. No matter how much we emphasize global revision of early drafts, many of our students will continue to write their papers the night before they are due. The most powerful solution is for teachers to structure their courses to promote writing as a process. There are many strategies for promoting writing as process: incorporating exploratory writing into the course (in‐class freewrites, out‐of‐class thinking pieces), breaking difficult assignments into scaffolded parts, teaching metacognitive skills for self‐assessment and reflection, setting due dates for rough drafts, requiring peer review of drafts, scheduling paper conferences, and encouraging use of the campus's writing center. We should note especially that writing centers are effective at teaching students how to use the writing process for brainstorming, organizing, and developing ideas. Experienced tutors or consultants can help students understand the demands of an assignment, draw out initial ideas, overcome writer's block by encouraging imperfect first drafts, and help writers revise for clarity, complexity, and development. On many campuses the director of the writing center is one of an instructor's most important resources for developing ways to incorporate writing into a course. Chapters 1116 offer many suggestions for encouraging students to deepen and extend their writing processes.

      Misconception 1: Emphasizing Writing and Critical Thinking in My Courses Will Take Time Away from Content

      Many faculty, understandably concerned about coverage of material, do not want to shift class time away from content. In addressing this conundrum, one must first distinguish between how much a teacher “covers” in a given course and how much students actually learn in a meaningful and usable way. Much of the literature on best pedagogical practices suggests that less is more. For example, Robert Zemsky


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