I've been fortunate I've had many great teachers. The one that had the biggest impact on my 'critical thinking' was Dr. Richard Paul.
He was the keynote speaker at a education conference I attended in the late 80's. His talk was challenging. He took the crowd to task and spent an hour beating the educational establishment like a cheap drum for not systematically teaching critical thinking. I loved it. It felt good to have my thinking validated in a dramatic and Socratic manner
Dr. Paul's ideas and passion lit me up. I was so luck to run into him in the hotel bar. This lead to 2 hours of fascinating conversation, part debate, part conversation, our talk changed my teaching life. I learned I could hang in with a heavy weight. I saw a way to make a change in my classroom.
Richard Paul was a man who made me think. And it was good.
I bought his books. I used his Socratic questioning methods in class. I printed and hung a banner that said: Learn how to think! on my classroom wall. This became one of my foundation values as a teacher. It remains so to this day.
One of my most cherished memories is of being pilloried in the principal's office by an outraged parent. This particular father had a truly brilliant daughter. She had a hungry mind. His voice shook with anger as he pointed at me and shouted:
"How dare you teach my child to challenge authority!"
I'll admit that I was very upset by this at the time. But over the years that encounter has become a badge of honor.
Richard Paul's work clarified by thinking about teaching. I wanted to attend the summer session at his Foundation for Critical Thinking in Sonoma California but simply couldn't afford the time or money.(Being a young teacher with a growing family and a pitiful pay check had it's limitations.) I truly regret not following that path.
Richard Paul's work clarified by thinking about teaching. I wanted to attend the summer session at his Foundation for Critical Thinking in Sonoma California but simply couldn't afford the time or money.(Being a young teacher with a growing family and a pitiful pay check had it's limitations.) I truly regret not following that path.
I found a great two part video from Richard Paul that reminded me why I wanted to learn more from him. I watched both videos several times. Once again his ideas lit me up.
Critical Thinking - Standards of Thought - Part 1 http://youtu.be/gNCOOUK-bMQ
Critical Thinking - Standards of Thought - Part 1 http://youtu.be/gNCOOUK-bMQ
Critical Thinking - Standards of Thought - Part 2 Foundation for Critical Thinking: http://youtu.be/Ksk2-ayoBck
Dr. Paul was a lot more interesting in that bar in Arizona than he is in these brief lectures. Still he lays out the foundations of critical thinking in less that a half an hour.
As I wrote this, is thought about my access to professional education in the 1980's and said "I wish there had been an online option." So I just checked and found there are two online courses offers through Cal-State Sonoma on critical thinking for instructors. I'm tempted! http://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/online-courses-for-instructors/574
Dennis O'Connor -- Thinking about thinking in La Jolla CA while the piano player echos the halls with fine music.
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