Definitions
of Critical Thinking
Critical thinking recognizes:
- patterns and provides a way to use those patterns to solve a problem or
answer a question
- errors in logic, reasoning, or the thought process
- what is irrelevant or extraneous information
- preconceptions, bias, values and the way that these affect our thinking.
- that these preconceptions and values mean that any inferences are within
a certain context
- ambiguity - that there may be more than one solution or more than one way
to solve a problem.
Critical thinking implies:
- that there is a reason or purpose to the thinking, some problem to be solved
or question to be answered.
- analysis, synthesis and evaluation of information
Critical thinkers:
- can approach something new in a logical manner
- look at how others have approached the same question or problem, but know
when they need more information
- use creative and diverse ways to generate a hypothesis, approach a problem
or answer a question
- can take their critical thinking skills and apply them to everyday life
- can clarify assumptions, and recognize that they have causes and consequences
- support their opinions with evidence, data, logical reasoning, and statistical
measures
- can look at a problem from multiple angles
- can not only fit the problem within a larger context, but decide if and
where it fits in the larger context
- are comfortable with ambiguity