Challenging Students to Think Critically 1

THE CHALLENGE: CHALLENGING STUDENTS TO THINK CRITICALLY

Except where reference is made to the works of others, the work described in this thesis is my own or was done in collaboration with my Thesis Chair. This thesis does not include proprietary or classified information

Shomari Zachary

Certificate of Approval:

______

Donald R. Livingston, Ed. D.Sharon M. Livingston, Ph. D.

Associate Professor & Thesis Co-ChairAssistant Professor & Thesis Co-Chair

Education DepartmentEducation Department

THE CHALLENGE: CHALLENGING STUDENTS TO THINK CRITICALLY

A thesis submitted

by

Shomari Naeem Zachary

to

LaGrangeCollege

in partial fulfillment of

the requirement for the

degree of

MASTER OF EDUCATION

in

Curriculum and Instruction

LaGrange, Georgia

July 25, 2011

Abstract

The topic of critical thinking has received much attention lately and many

colleges and professional jobs are now calling for students who possess critical thinking

skills.However, many teachers have failed to incorporate critical thinking into their

instructional goals. The purpose of this action research study was to determine if the

implementation of critical thinking would improve academic achievement. Qualitative and quantitative data were collected. Pre-test and post-test scores of a control group and treatment group were used along with an instructional plan, reflective journal, and a student survey. Although, assessment data showed that critical thinking did not improve students’ academic achievement in a statistical manner, qualitative data recorded through the reflective journal showed that students increased their use of critical thinking skills, and increased their ability to make connections, solve problems, and identify key concepts and their relationship to the content and the real world.

Table of Contents

Abstract ………………………………………………………………………………….iii

Table of Contents …………………………………………………………...... iv

List of Tables ……………………………………………………………….…………….v

Chapter 1: Introduction ………………………………………………………………….1

Statement of the Problem ………………………………………………………..1

Significance of the Problem ……………………………………………………..2

Theoretical and Conceptual Frameworks ……………………………………….4

Focus Questions …………………………………………………………………7

Overview of Methodology ………………………………………………………8

Human as Researcher ……………………………………………...... 8

Chapter 2: Review of the Literature………………………………………...... 9

Instructional Strategies that Promote Critical Thinking ………………………….9

The Effects and Benefits of Teaching Critical Thinking …………...... 14

Teacher and Student Perceptions about Critical Thinking ……………………...16

Chapter 3: Methodology ………………………………………………………………...21

Research Design …………………………………………………………………21

Setting ……………………………………………………………...... 22

Subjects ………………………………………………………………………….22

Procedures and Data Collection Methods ……………………………………….22

Validity,Reliability, Dependability, and Bias………………………………...…26

Analysis of Data …………………………………………………...... 29

Chapter 4: Results ……………………………………………………………………….32

Chapter 5: Analysis and Discussion of Results

Analysis of Results………………………………………………………...... 40

Discussion …………………………………………………………...... 47

Implications……………………………………………………………………...49

Impact on Student Learning ……………………………………………………..50

Recommendations for Future Research …………………………………………51

References …………………………………………………………………...... 53

Appendixes …………………………………………………………………….……...... 60
List of Tables

Tables

Table 3.1Data Shell………………………………………………………………...22

Table 4.1Independent t-test: Pre Test scores Treatment and Control……………...33

Table 4.2Independent t-test: Post Test scores Treatment and Control…………….34

Table 4.3Dependent t-test Pre/Post Test Treatment………………………………..34

Table 4.4Dependent t-test Pre/Post Test Control…………………………………..35

Table 4.5Survey Data………………………………………………………………39

Challenging Students to Think Critically 1

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION

Statement of the Problem

There has been much public outcry that curricula and standards across the

nation should be more rigorous and that all students should be held to higher standards

to ensureacademic achievement. Rigor requires that teachers make content and

lessons more challenging and meaningful to the learner. The path by which teachers

should subscribe is often debated, challenged, or criticized, which leads many teachers

to stick with the conventional approach of teaching to the test. The challenge lies in the

fact that rigor requires the use of thinking skills,such as evaluating, analyzing, and

synthesizing to solve problems (Paul, 1990). Teachers’ opinions vary on whether to use

criticalthinking skills or how to incorporate them into the curriculum. As a result,

students lack critical thinking skills and high quality instruction that promotes higher

level thinking. Students mostly receive a great deal of “drill and kill” instruction that

leads to minimum thinking skills and, at best, the ability to recall facts (Janesick, 2004).

Instead of challenging students to think, explore, create, and analyze, teachers train

students to memorize and regurgitate information.Learning in this way is neither fun nor

rewardingfor students. Due to the high stakes testing environment, teachers focus on

teaching content and rely on rote memorization and recall instead of making learning

meaningful and useful to students(Skaggs, 2004).

How can educators expect students to think critically when students have not

been taught how to synthesize, evaluate, analyze information, orgiven the

opportunity to demonstrate their ability to think? There are many issues that confront

teachers and students as it relates to teaching critical thinking skills. For teachers, the

challenge is how to incorporate critical thinking skills into the curriculum; for students,

the challenge is overcoming issues such as socioeconomic status, gender, and race in

order to succeed in school. According to Newmann (1998), teachers must be willing to

make curriculum and instructional decisions that foster students’ abilities to engage in

thinking and interpretation. William-Boyd (2004) stated that “John Dewey contended

that the most crucial need in American society was for students to be taught to reflect

upon what they learned in school” (p. 95).

This study explored and implemented strategies that promoted critical thinking

skills todetermine whether critical thinking skills increased academic achievement.

The research question for this study focused on what strategies teachers could implement

in order to teach critical thinking and improve students’ academics and desire to learn.

Significance of the Problem

Over the last three decades much research has been done concerning the issue

of criticalthinking and its relevance to education and society. Reformers and

researchers have agreed that students who possess critical thinking skills are the key to

America’s continued economic success and dominance (National Commission on

Excellence in Education, 1983).Paul (1990) suggested “we can no longer afford the kind

of schoolingthat at best transforms students into narrow specialists and at worst leaves

them without job skills, functional literacy, or self-confidence” (p. xix). Swanson,

Spencer, and Petersen (1998) echoed reformers and researchers by stating that the

nation’s young people will need a higher level of academic and occupational knowledge

and skills in order to be competitive in the twenty-first century. While research and

reformers are calling for critical thinking skillsschools havefailed to embrace

and incorporatethe ideas of critical thinking into the curriculum.

There is a huge impact when students are not taught how to think critically.

Students are affected both academically and socially. Many students who lack

critical thinking skills struggle academically because they feel that education is irrelevant

or has little value to their personal lives. This causes students to become disengaged and

can lead to a myriad of problems ranging from misbehavior, dropping out, and countless

activities that undermine the fabric of society. Swanson et al. (1998) reported

that many high school graduates from at-risk backgrounds are illiterate and those who

decide to enter college are less likely to graduate. This can be attributed to students not

being prepared for college and lacking the skills to process and analyze information.

Students with low thinking skillsalso find it difficult to complete tasks that require them

to think independentlyoutside of rote memorization and recall. One final note

is thatU.S. students are falling behind other developing countries academically (Paul,

1990).

Students who fail to receive a high school diploma or matriculate into college

face many challenges in their daily life. Jobs now call on individuals to evaluate

problems, analyze and detect trends, and interpret data. Individuals who lack these

skills are often presented with fewer options in life and many times have to accept low

wage jobs.Furthermore, students who have not been taught how to think critically lack

the ability to make rational decisions in their adult life because they fail to examine the

consequences,assumptions, and prejudices of issues that surround them (Paul, 1990). In

order to address these concerns so that all members of society can prepare for the future,

teachers must offer students opportunities to attain content goals through critical thinking.

Theoretical and Conceptual Frameworks

Recent education reforms and national panels have called on American schools

to teach reasoning, problem solving, and critical thinking (Newmann, 1992).

However, classrooms across America, especially those filled with at-risk students, fail to

embrace the ideas of constructivism through the use of critical thinking skills.

Constructivismis the idea of constructing knowledge based on experiences and

coming to know one’s world in relation to nature and society ( Brooks, 1999). The idea

of teaching critical thinking skills aligns closely with the components of constructivism.

The use of critical thinking skills allows individuals to detect biases, interpret, analyze

and manipulate information, anticipate and respond to arguments in opposition to

one’s own, and evaluate one’s views clearly and persuasively. Application of these

functions supports the constructivist idea that learners must draw new knowledge from

their experiences.Furthermore, the constructivist idea of active learning is

enhanced by critical thinking skills because students become engaged in cognition skills

rather than performing rituals, routines, and procedures that lack substantive

understanding (Newmann, Wehlage, & Lamborn, 1992).

The basis of social constructivism is to acknowledge the background and

uniqueness of each learner. Students come from various backgrounds that reflect

differences in income, race, gender and culture (Gordon,1999). Research has proven

that socioeconomic status, peer culture, and the quality of individual teachers has a

profound impact on student achievement (Newmann, 1998). Within the confines of

constructivism, teachers must take into account the background and culture of each

learner. Through the use of thinking skills, teachers can promote social interaction that

enables students to become aware of their background and culture, and foster an

environment that embraces the views and experiences of one’s self and others.

The goal of the Education Department of LaGrange College is to develop teachers

who embrace caring and supportive classrooms, foster enthusiastic engagement in

learning and utilize the best teaching practices (LaGrange College Education Department,

2008). This study specifically relates to Tenets 1 and 3 ofLaGrangeCollege

Education Department’sConceptual Framework. Tenet 1 is also closely aligned with

Domain 3 of the Georgia Framework for Teaching.

Tenet One of LaGrange College Education Department’s Conceptual Framework

focuses on the teacher as a professional. Teachers are encouraged to provide learning

environments that foster enjoyment and rigor, and enables students to be actively

involved in the teaching and learning process (LagrangeCollege Education Department,

2008).Additionally, as stated by LaGrangeCollege Education Department (2008),

teachers should build on the abilities, interests, and needs of students in order to create

meaningful curriculum. Domain 3 of the Georgia Framework for teaching focuses on

teachers creating environments that encourage social interaction, active engagement in

learning, and self-motivation (LaGrange College Education Department, 2008). Critical

thinking skills are advantageous for teachers because critical thinking skills provide

teachers and students an opportunity to draw from each individual’s experience and to

explore learning beyond content and subject matter. In order to be successful, teachers

must draw on their experience and knowledge and make connections to the wide array of

students that make up their community of learners. Teachers must also engage students in

critical thinking so that students can interpret the experiences and achievements of their

peers, and analyze how they relate to their own perspectives. Gordon (1999) concluded:

Findings from modern cognitive science suggest that effective learning and the

achievement of understanding result from active engagement with and operation

on the relevant knowledge processes and structures in the interest of constructing

meanings that make sense to the learner. Such engagement and operations are the

vehicles of cognitive development. Because the knowledge processes and

structures are derived from the culture, in properly conceived teaching and

learning transactions, their transmission is a natural concomitant of intellective

development. (p. 73)

Tenet 3 of the Conceptual Framework focuses on teachers providing caring

and supportive classrooms that builds learning communities (LaGrangeCollege

Education Department, 2008). Many teachers have negative dispositions concerning

students and strongly feel that students are incapable of thinking critically. As

a result, teachers continue to take a conventional approach to teaching and students

continue to perform poorly. Teachers must go beyond the conventional approach to

teaching and create lessons that have meaning to students' personal lives. According to

McLaren,teachers should set high expectations for students and “view the world through

anti-racist, multicultural, non-gender biased lenses and advocate for social justice and

equality”(as cited in Lagrange College Education Department, 2008, p. 8).

In order to provide a caring and supportive classroom, teachers have to examine

and reflect on their own experiences and dispositions. In other words, teachers must

become critical thinkers before they can teach students to think critically. In doing so,

teachers become models for their students and guide students to apply the principle of

cultural democracy: the right of every American to relate to his own ethnic, racial, or

social group while exploring mainstreamAmerica (Castaneda, James, & Robbins, 1974).

It is through learning to think critically that we can best deal with problems that face us

individually, as a nation, and as a global community (Hytten, 2004).

This thesis has associative value to core Propositions 1 and 4 of the

National Board for Professional Teachers Standards [NBPTS]. Proposition One of the

NBPTS encourages teachers to commit to students and their learning and to recognize

individual differences in order to embrace cultural differences and enhance peer

relationships.The use of critical thinking skills in the classroom will allow students to

make connections between students of different cultural backgrounds and help students

embrace their role and contribution to society. To capture the fulfillment of Proposition 1

teachers must believe and challenge all students regardless of race and gender to learn at

high levels to ensure academicachievement.

Proposition 4 of NBPTS calls on teachers to be accountable and to examine and

reflect on their use of practices, theories, and knowledge. Teaching critical thinking skills

can be challenging for teachers because it forces teachers to focus beyond the realm of

content and incorporate skills that require time, reflection, and the use of several

instructional strategies. Teachers must be willing to promote the development of critical

thinking skills, design instruction that meets the needs of all learners, model the attitudes

and skills they wish to teach their students, and seek out strategies and professional

development that fosters students’ ability to learn and process information.

Focus Questions

Focus questions are questions that guide the researcher through the process of

collecting and analyzing data, examining related content that provides insight for the

study being conducted, and interpreting the results of a study (Hendricks, 2009). Focus

questions force researchers to construct their own answers and meanings to the problem

at hand (Hendricks, 2009). This study focused on the problem of teachers not teaching

critical thinking skills to students,although a preponderance of research suggest that

critical thinking skills are necessary for student success and survival. There were three

focus questions that guided the research of this study. The first question was what

instructional strategies could teachers use to implement the use of critical thinking skills?

This focus question related to the pedagogical component of research. The second

question this study addressed was how did critical thinking affect student achievement

and behavior? This focus question centered around student learning outcomes. The last

question this study attempted to answer was what attitudes and dispositions did students

and teachers exhibit through the use of critical thinking skills?This question connected to

the idea of reflective practice.

Overview of Methodology

The research design of this study was action research. Action research

promotes the use of prior skills and experiences and encourages professionals to reflect

on their practice and improve it. Qualitative and quantitative data were collected to

determine the effectiveness of incorporating critical thinking skills into the curriculum.

Qualitativemethods that wereused by the researcher included an instructional plan

and a reflective journal.Quantitative methods that were used included a survey and a

teacher made test. The setting of this study took place at a suburban high school located

in Decatur, Georgia andconsisted of thirty eight 10th grade world history students. The

duration for this study will be three to four weeks to determine whether the teaching of

critical thinking skills improved the actual use of critical thinking skills and academic

success. One class served as the treatment group while the other class served as the

control group. To ensure that this study focused on validity, reliability, dependability,

and bias both qualitative and quantitative methods were used along with scholarly

research. To determine whether critical thinking skills improved academic achievement,

data was analyzed to determine if there were significant differences between the two

groups and what categorical themes were present.

Human as Researcher

I am a history teacher at ColumbiaHigh School and have taught there for five

years.I hold a Bachelor of Education degree from Georgia Southern University and I am

currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction at LaGrangeCollege.