Critical Thinking
Critical Thinking
1
Critical Thinking (CT)
CT is the process of thinking clearly, with accuracy and precision;
of thinking carefully, with logic and depth; and of thinking open-
mindedly, by examining points of view and acknowledging
assumptions and biases within a given viewpoint.
4. Divergent thinking - This type of thinking starts from a common point and
moves outward into a variety of perspectives.
5. Inductive thinking - This is the process of reasoning from parts to the whole,
from examples to generalizations.
©2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Creative Thinking and it’s Tools
Creative thinking is the generation of new ideas within or across
domains of knowledge, drawing upon or intentionally breaking
with established symbolic rules and procedures. It usually
involves the behaviors of preparation, incubation, insight,
evaluation, elaboration, and communication. In the context of
college teaching and learning, creative thinking deliberately and
actively engages students in:
•Bringing together existing ideas into new configurations;
•Developing new properties or possibilities for something that
already exists; and
•Discovering or imagining something entirely new.
The yellow hat represents values and benefits and why something may work.
The black hat represents judgment: the "devil's advocate" or why something may not work.
The green hat represents creativity: possibilities, alternatives, and new ideas.
The blue hat represents management of the thinking process, usually employed by the
chairperson of the meeting.
©2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Powerful Types of Creative Thinking:
Reframing,
mind mapping,
insight,
creative flow.
To be discussed later …