Critical Thinking in ELT - Macmillan Critical thinking Skills are essential to those progressing to...
Transcript of Critical Thinking in ELT - Macmillan Critical thinking Skills are essential to those progressing to...
Critical Thinking in ELT
By Ed Newbon
November 2014
• A recent study commissioned by the British Council found that English language speakers in fast-growing regions in the world can earn up to three as much as those who don’t speak the language.
Teaching language may no longer be enough...
“… as English becomes more generally available, little or no competitive advantage is gained by adopting it. Rather, it has become a new baseline: without English you are not even in the race.”
David Graddol, English Next (2006), The British Council
Skills for life
“In a globalised, postmodern world a rather different model of education has emerged. An individual, to participate fully in the new economy – as worker, consumer and responsible citizen – needs to be even better informed (and about global as well as local issues) and needs higher-order and more flexible skills.”
David Graddol, English Next (2006), The British Council
4 Areas for developing LIFE SKILLS
Thinking Skills
Creativity/imagination Problem solving Decision making Self knowledge Critical thinking Accessing/Analysing
Working Skills
4 Areas for developing LIFE SKILLS
Communication/collaboration People management Time management Organisation Negotiating Leading by influence
Social Skills
4 Areas for developing LIFE SKILLS
Citizenship Social responsibility Cultural awareness Social development Respecting diversity Networking
Learning Skills
4 Areas for developing LIFE SKILLS
ICT Agility and adaptability Receiving and giving feedback Handling criticism Innovation/exploration Learner autonomy
Skills we will use throughout our life…
WORKING
LEARNING THINKING
SOCIAL
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Why Critical thinking in ELT?
• Learners are already being exposed to different cultures and therefore different ways of thinking which makes the language classroom the prefect place for exploring critical thinking skills.
• Critical thinking development leads to higher academic achievement
Which word is the odd one out?
• Camel
• Desert
• Kangaroo
• Eat (foul)
• warm
• Nobody is an absolute beginner when it comes to Critical thinking.
• Whether we believe what we see or hear
• Taking steps to find out whether something is likely to be true
• Arguing our own case if someone doesn’t believe us
“Academic study requires increasing levels of critical analysis at every
level of study”
“Critical thinking Skills are essential to those progressing to higher levels
of academic study”
Cottrell, 2005
Critical thinking in ELT
• Distinguishing fact from opinion
• Challenging assumptions
• Keeping an open mind to different possibilities and solutions
Day, 2003
Lower order critical thinking
skills
• Receive
• Recite
• Direct Medium
• Transmit Knowledge
• Reproduce Knowledge
Lower order critical thinking skills
• Receive
• Recite
• Direct Medium
• Transmit Knowledge
• Reproduce Knowledge
Higher order critical thinking skills
• Manipulate
• Transform meaning
• Solve Problems
• Construction
• Uncertainty
• Environment and opportunities
Fact Vs. Opinion
London
1. It has a population of nearly 8.5 million people.
2. The people are the friendliest in the world.
3. London is the capital city of England and the UK.
4. It was the host city for the 2012 Olympic games.
5. It is a great place.
6. The cost of buying a house is very reasonable.
Fact Vs. Opinion 2. Where does the text come from?
Smoking ban
No-smoking regulations came into effect in Scotland on 26 March 2006,[92] in
Wales on 2 April 2007, in Northern Ireland on 30 April 2007 and in England
on 1 July 2007.[93] The legislation was cited as an example of good
regulation which has had a favourable impact on the UK economy by the
Department of Business Innovation and Skills[94] and a review of the impact
of smoke-free legislation carried out for the Department of Health concluded
that there was no clear adverse impact on the hospitality industry[95] despite
initial criticism from some voices within the pub trade.
Fact Vs. Opinion 2. Where does the text come from?
Smoking ban
Publicans and members of the Clubs & Institute Union, which represents
over 2000 working men’s clubs, have been invited to attend the event which
marks the fourth anniversary of the smoking ban in England. Organisers say
they will be lobbying MPs for a review of the ban and an amendment to the
legislation.
Campaigners say the ban has had a devastating impact on community pubs
throughout Britain. Almost three years after the introduction of smoking bans
in England, Scotland and Wales, Scotland had lost 7.1% of its pub estate
(467 pubs), Wales 7.3% (274), and England 7.6% (4,148).
Save Our Pubs & Clubs is a coalition of groups and individuals who believe
that the smoking ban is excessive and should be amended to offer choice,
protect jobs and help struggling pubs get back on their feet.
Fact Vs. Opinion 2. Where does the text come from?
Smoking ban
Three years have now passed since the introduction of legislation to make
workplaces and public places smokefree in England. The findings from
research summarised in this report show that the law has had a significant
impact. England’s experience and the outcomes observed are very similar to
those reported in other countries where smokefree laws have been
implemented and research has been conducted to explore impact.
Results from the studies conducted in England show benefits for health,
changes in attitudes and behaviour and no clear adverse impact on the
hospitality industry. The study of barworkers demonstrated that they
experienced large changes in their occupational exposure to SHS, reported
improvements………..
Skillful images
Critical thinking in images.
Critical thinking in literature
Critical thinking in Skillful
• What exactly is an argument?
• Identifying reference to things outside the text?
• Identifying sources of information?
• Recognizing trends and patterns
• Identifying fact, speculation and opinion
• Assessing the logic of an argument
• Inferring criticism
• Identifying logical fallacies
• Identifying humour
• Inferring a speaker’s attitude
• Applying a theory to other situations
• Identifying key information in a an argument
• Representative samples
Stella is the Vice-Pro-Chancellor for Learning, Teaching and Student Engagement at the University of East London. Prior to her current position she was the Director for Lifelong Learning at the University of Leeds, UK.
Did you know … ?
What is Stella’s connection to Macmillan?
• Stella has published The Study Skills Handbook, Critical Thinking Skills, Skills for Success, and The Exam Skills Handbook with Palgrave.
Did you know…..?
Skillful
•English for Academic Purposes (EAP) for the 18+ international market
•5 levels
•“Dual-skills approach” - two Student’s Books in every level: Reading & Writing,
Listening & Speaking
•Two Teacher’s Books in every level
•Digital component for both students and teachers – Digibook, tests, and teacher
resources
•10 units
•Foundation level provides a bridge between general English and EAP
•American English at Foundation level, moving to increased internationalized English
as levels progress
Five Levels – Foundation
• CEFR A1
• A bridge between EAP and general English
• Safe content to be used by teenagers upward
• Sentence frameworks to guide students through more challenging questions
• Uses 100% American English; topics are international
• Retains sophisticated and beautiful design concept of higher levels
Five Levels – Level 4
• Highest level in series – CEFR C1
• High-level, original academic topics
• Co-author Lindsay Clandfield of Global fame
• International English
• Strong focus on analytical and critical thinking skills
Yang and Gamble Study
• Experimental group. Leaners engaged in Critical Thinking tasks such as debates and peer critiques.
• Control group. Leaners engaged in non-critical thinking task “regular” EFL activities such as group presentations and process writing.
• Results. The experimental group demonstrated a significant improvement in English proficiency in comparison to the control group and superior critical thinking and academic achievement in the end of course exam.
Quotes from Students
“We can make reasonable judgements before adopting information,
instead of just receiving it without thinking”
“I will become an adult and have to have my own ideas instead of
Just following other peoples’ opinions”
“It can develop our abilities to read articles and think independently”
Yang & Gamble, 2013
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http://www.macmillanenglish.com/webinar-archive/2011/