Posted by Tara Della Rocca
Perkins, D. (1993). The thinking-learning connection: Creating a culture of thinking. Educational Leadership, 51(3), 98-99.
This article is a brief 'primer' on a culture of thinking. Perkins describes the reason for attempting to 'enculturate' thinking and describes briefly, how to do this in the classroom.
"...education has the opportunity, and hence the responsibility, to improve students' thinking. A variety of studies show that people often do not use their minds well, and can learn to do so better (p.98)."
Thinking skills and abilities are not enough...
"Several philosophers and psychologies have written of the importance of "thinking dispositions." If you have a disposition to behave in a certain way, you have the kinds of attitudes, understandings, and motivations that nudge you to behave that way (p.98)."
This connects to Ritchhart's 'intellectual character'. Students need more than the ability to think - they need motivation, inclination, proper attitudes to use thinking skills.
"People acquire dispositions all the time, through "enculturation." We grow up, play, and work in settings where certain values and practices are honored. We learn, by osmosis as it were, to honor them too. The moral: To teach of thinking, it's not enough to teach skills and strategies. We need to create a culture that "enculturates" students into good thinking practices (p.98)."
"It's proved helpful to view enculturation as involving three elements: exemplars, interactions, and explanations. We absorb a culture because we encounter examplars - people around us, or historical or fictional figures who embody certain norms and practices; and because we have interactions with friends, teachers, parents, and others that highlight certain expectations; and because, now and again, people offer direct explanations about anything from table manners to how to make better decisions (p.99)."
Perkins briefly describes what this means for educational practice. Thinking is not a separate lesson for students. Rather, it must be part of the culture in which teachers provide exemplars, interactions and explanations. Perkins gives examples of these three elements, as they pertain to enculturating thinking in the classroom.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Creating a culture of thinking and dialogue at home
Posted by Tara Della Rocca
Jeffrey, T. 2007. Creating a culture of thinking and dialogue at home. Gifted Child Today, 30(4), 21-25.
This is a simple article promoting the idea of enculturating thinking at home. The author informs parents that their behavior has an enormous impact on their children, in terms of forming the kinds of thought and communication habits they develop. He aims to encourage parents to make the thinking they do more visible to their children and to take opportunities to practice thinking dispositions with their children.
"The way a group communicates, what it communicates, and what it values are all components of a culture of thinking... Tishman, Perkins, and Jay describe the process of establishing a classroom culture of thinking in four distinct ways; modeling, explanation, interaction, and feedback (p.21)."
"Aristotle once said, "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit (p.22)." Parents (and teachers, I believe) can model thinking behaviors or dispositions such that they become recognizable to and adopted as habits by our children/students.
"Thinking dispositions are comprised of one's attitudes, emotions, and motivations that emerge when facing a situation that requires thinking (p.22)."
Thinking Dispositions That Parents Can Experiment with at Home
Seek multiple approaches to problems
Persistence
Risk-taking
Curiosity
"Many children learn more from watching parents' behaviors than listening to their words (p.22)."
"Thinking dispositions are cultivated through social interaction (p.22)." This article is clear support for creating a culture of thinking in that the author recognizes the power of the environment and community interactions in shaping the behaviors/dispositions of children.
Jeffrey, T. 2007. Creating a culture of thinking and dialogue at home. Gifted Child Today, 30(4), 21-25.
This is a simple article promoting the idea of enculturating thinking at home. The author informs parents that their behavior has an enormous impact on their children, in terms of forming the kinds of thought and communication habits they develop. He aims to encourage parents to make the thinking they do more visible to their children and to take opportunities to practice thinking dispositions with their children.
"The way a group communicates, what it communicates, and what it values are all components of a culture of thinking... Tishman, Perkins, and Jay describe the process of establishing a classroom culture of thinking in four distinct ways; modeling, explanation, interaction, and feedback (p.21)."
"Aristotle once said, "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit (p.22)." Parents (and teachers, I believe) can model thinking behaviors or dispositions such that they become recognizable to and adopted as habits by our children/students.
"Thinking dispositions are comprised of one's attitudes, emotions, and motivations that emerge when facing a situation that requires thinking (p.22)."
Thinking Dispositions That Parents Can Experiment with at Home
Seek multiple approaches to problems
Persistence
Risk-taking
Curiosity
"Many children learn more from watching parents' behaviors than listening to their words (p.22)."
"Thinking dispositions are cultivated through social interaction (p.22)." This article is clear support for creating a culture of thinking in that the author recognizes the power of the environment and community interactions in shaping the behaviors/dispositions of children.
The teaching of thinking
Posted by Tara Della Rocca
Nickerson, R. S., Perkins, D. N., & Smith, E. E. (1985). The teaching of thinking. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
This book is fairly dated because it discusses programs that were implemented in classrooms during the 80s to promote thinking skills for students K-12 and many of these programs are no longer used. Still, the major theme of the book is that teaching of thinking can and should happen in classrooms. The authors, without providing perfect answers (because ones do not exist), discuss possibilities for teaching thinking and discuss the different forms this can take. For example, some programs focus on thinking skills specifically, and others incorporate the teaching of thinking into learning about other content.
Here are some pieces that struck me from the book as I skimmed through in search of relevant research for teaching thinking today.
"It is reasonable, in our view, to think of thinking as a form of skilled behavior...Doing so invites the drawing of parallels with other complex skills, and speculation regarding how much of what we know about the acquisition of motor skills is transferable to the cognitive domain. One parallel involves the distinction between general physical conditioning and fine-grained control of specific motor skills on the one hand and the distinction between habitual thoughtfulness and the application of specific cognitive skills that are appropriate to specific task situations on the other."
The authors compare thinking to physical activities. By learning how to expend energy appropriately on a given task, we hone the task.
"If thinking skills are really learned behavior patterns, we might expect an analogous effect of training, namely an enlarging of one's repertoire of precoded intellectual performance patterns that function relatively automatically in appropriate contexts. We do not mean to suggest that there is nothing more to the development of thinking skills than this, but that this may be one aspect of it."
This is a list of thinking skills that one thinking program (The Philosophy for Children by The Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children) attempt to teach. I think it's a useful collection of thinking moves students use to build understanding, solve problems and make decisions - so I hope to use this vocabulary more frequently in my classroom to NAME what my students (and I) are doing in our heads.
Analyzing value statements
Constructing hypotheses
Defining terms
Developing concepts
Discovering alternatives
Drawing inferences
Finding underlying assumptions
Formulating causal explanations
Formulating questions
Generalizing
Giving reasons
Grasping part-whole and whole-part connections
Identifying and using criteria
Knowing how to deal with ambiguities
Knowing how to treat vagueness
Looking out for informal fallacies
Making connections
Making distinctions
Providing instances and illustrations
Recognizing contextual aspects of truth and falsity
Recognizing differences of perspective
Recognizing interdependence of means and ends
Standardizing ordinary language sentences
Taking all considerations into account
Using ordinal or relational logic
Working with analogies
Working with consistency and contradiction
This is a useful list of general thinking strategies I'd like to promote in the classroom. Not only do I want to make my students capable of using these skills, but more inclined to do so and aware of their usage of them.
Final word:
"It is difficult to imagine a more important educational objective than the teaching and learning of how to think more effectively than we typically do. Indeed, if we cannot learn to think more rationally and effectively, we are, as a species, in serious trouble."
"We believe the teaching of thinking should involve all four types of educational objectives: abilities that underlie thinking, methods that aid thinking, knowledge about thinking, and attitudes that are conducive to thinking."
Abilities: include classification, analysis, hypothesis formation, etc.
Method: include problem solving heuristics and self management strategies
Knowledge about thinking: metacognition and knowledge of one's own idiosyncratic strengths and weaknesses
Attitudes: sense of curiosity and wonder, the thrill of discovery, and the excitement and deep satisfaction that come from productive intellectual activity
After discussing various programs used to 'teach thinking' in classrooms, the authors discuss the difficulty of evaluation of these programs. This is a common theme I've seen elsewhere. Teaching thinking involves more than just giving instruction on skills so students are ABLE to think - it means developing their knowledge about thinking and attitudes toward thinking. Evaluation of students' thinking is therefore complex.
Nickerson, R. S., Perkins, D. N., & Smith, E. E. (1985). The teaching of thinking. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
This book is fairly dated because it discusses programs that were implemented in classrooms during the 80s to promote thinking skills for students K-12 and many of these programs are no longer used. Still, the major theme of the book is that teaching of thinking can and should happen in classrooms. The authors, without providing perfect answers (because ones do not exist), discuss possibilities for teaching thinking and discuss the different forms this can take. For example, some programs focus on thinking skills specifically, and others incorporate the teaching of thinking into learning about other content.
Here are some pieces that struck me from the book as I skimmed through in search of relevant research for teaching thinking today.
"It is reasonable, in our view, to think of thinking as a form of skilled behavior...Doing so invites the drawing of parallels with other complex skills, and speculation regarding how much of what we know about the acquisition of motor skills is transferable to the cognitive domain. One parallel involves the distinction between general physical conditioning and fine-grained control of specific motor skills on the one hand and the distinction between habitual thoughtfulness and the application of specific cognitive skills that are appropriate to specific task situations on the other."
The authors compare thinking to physical activities. By learning how to expend energy appropriately on a given task, we hone the task.
"If thinking skills are really learned behavior patterns, we might expect an analogous effect of training, namely an enlarging of one's repertoire of precoded intellectual performance patterns that function relatively automatically in appropriate contexts. We do not mean to suggest that there is nothing more to the development of thinking skills than this, but that this may be one aspect of it."
This is a list of thinking skills that one thinking program (The Philosophy for Children by The Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children) attempt to teach. I think it's a useful collection of thinking moves students use to build understanding, solve problems and make decisions - so I hope to use this vocabulary more frequently in my classroom to NAME what my students (and I) are doing in our heads.
Analyzing value statements
Constructing hypotheses
Defining terms
Developing concepts
Discovering alternatives
Drawing inferences
Finding underlying assumptions
Formulating causal explanations
Formulating questions
Generalizing
Giving reasons
Grasping part-whole and whole-part connections
Identifying and using criteria
Knowing how to deal with ambiguities
Knowing how to treat vagueness
Looking out for informal fallacies
Making connections
Making distinctions
Providing instances and illustrations
Recognizing contextual aspects of truth and falsity
Recognizing differences of perspective
Recognizing interdependence of means and ends
Standardizing ordinary language sentences
Taking all considerations into account
Using ordinal or relational logic
Working with analogies
Working with consistency and contradiction
This is a useful list of general thinking strategies I'd like to promote in the classroom. Not only do I want to make my students capable of using these skills, but more inclined to do so and aware of their usage of them.
Final word:
"It is difficult to imagine a more important educational objective than the teaching and learning of how to think more effectively than we typically do. Indeed, if we cannot learn to think more rationally and effectively, we are, as a species, in serious trouble."
"We believe the teaching of thinking should involve all four types of educational objectives: abilities that underlie thinking, methods that aid thinking, knowledge about thinking, and attitudes that are conducive to thinking."
Abilities: include classification, analysis, hypothesis formation, etc.
Method: include problem solving heuristics and self management strategies
Knowledge about thinking: metacognition and knowledge of one's own idiosyncratic strengths and weaknesses
Attitudes: sense of curiosity and wonder, the thrill of discovery, and the excitement and deep satisfaction that come from productive intellectual activity
After discussing various programs used to 'teach thinking' in classrooms, the authors discuss the difficulty of evaluation of these programs. This is a common theme I've seen elsewhere. Teaching thinking involves more than just giving instruction on skills so students are ABLE to think - it means developing their knowledge about thinking and attitudes toward thinking. Evaluation of students' thinking is therefore complex.