What can be done when a weakness in thinking skills
has been identified in a group of students or workers? People who cannot
think as well as we need them to think, whether they be workers, parents,
children, supervisors, teachers, soldiers, elders
impact the
success of our schools, businesses and society. Is this weakness simply
a matter of their skills, or is it a question of their habits of mind,
that is, their dispositional attitude toward using thinking as a preferred
means of problem solving and decision making. Are they approaching important
problems and decisions with attitudes of closed-mindedness, resistance
to reason, disregard for evidence, indifference to vital information,
mistrust of thinking, indifference toward consequences, and little desire
to attend to the complexities or subtleties of the decisions and problems
at hand?
Everyone must learn to think well to live happy lives and
to be active and productive members of society. Some people fail to think
well because they lack strong mental habits that encourage the use of
thinking and reasoning to solve problems. Some people have deficient skills.
But nurturing the habits of mind enables strengthening the skills. And
successes in using the skills reciprocates by nourishing and supporting
those positive dispositions, such as truth-seeking, open-mindedness, a
desire to learn, cognitive maturity, a tendency to try to anticipate of
consequences, and warranted confidence in reasoning.
Our common goal as professionals, educators and leaders is to support
the development of individuals and communities that are willing and able
to apply critical thinking in their daily work, studies and lives. For
more on thinking dispositions and how they relate to thinking skills,
click for your free copy of "Critical
Thinking: What It Is and Why It Counts."
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