Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum

This study evaluated the impact of a debate intervention on students’ critical thinking. The design-based research project included a quasi-experimental, one group pre-test, post-test design. Results indicated small effect sizes on critical thinking using the Cornell Critical Thinking Test-Level...

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Main Authors: April Walker, Todd Kettler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Turkish Journal of Giftedness and Education 2020-06-01
Series:Turkish Journal of Giftedness and Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/journal/3397/article/758473/file/1170808/download
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spelling doaj-0a7382a362164089aa605d88d077b6252020-11-25T03:12:44ZengTurkish Journal of Giftedness and Education Turkish Journal of Giftedness and Education 2146-38322146-38322020-06-01101213910.46893/talent.758473Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis CurriculumApril Walker0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8672-3394 Todd Kettler1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3816-242XDepartment of Curriculum and Instruction, University of North TexasDepartment of Educational Psychology, Baylor UniversityThis study evaluated the impact of a debate intervention on students’ critical thinking. The design-based research project included a quasi-experimental, one group pre-test, post-test design. Results indicated small effect sizes on critical thinking using the Cornell Critical Thinking Test-Level X (d = 0.40) and an assessment of argument analysis (d = 0.41). High-ability students entered the project with stronger critical thinking than general-education students (d = .82; d = .41), and high-ability students appeared to benefit more from the intervention as the performance gaps increased in the post-test phase (d = 1.08; d = .80) suggesting possible aptitude-treatment interactions or the Matthew effect. Qualitative data indicated that students learned to (a) think on the spot, (b) analyze arguments, (c) see other perspectives, and (d) construct counter-arguments. This study corroborates previous research that indicated a relationship between high ability and critical thinking.https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/journal/3397/article/758473/file/1170808/downloadgifted and talentedhigh abilitymiddle schoolargumentationdebatecritical thinkingargument analysisadolescentsdesign-based research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author April Walker
Todd Kettler
spellingShingle April Walker
Todd Kettler
Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum
Turkish Journal of Giftedness and Education
gifted and talented
high ability
middle school
argumentation
debate
critical thinking
argument analysis
adolescents
design-based research
author_facet April Walker
Todd Kettler
author_sort April Walker
title Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum
title_short Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum
title_full Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum
title_fullStr Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum
title_full_unstemmed Developing Critical Thinking Skills in High Ability Adolescents: Effects of a Debate and Argument Analysis Curriculum
title_sort developing critical thinking skills in high ability adolescents: effects of a debate and argument analysis curriculum
publisher Turkish Journal of Giftedness and Education
series Turkish Journal of Giftedness and Education
issn 2146-3832
2146-3832
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This study evaluated the impact of a debate intervention on students’ critical thinking. The design-based research project included a quasi-experimental, one group pre-test, post-test design. Results indicated small effect sizes on critical thinking using the Cornell Critical Thinking Test-Level X (d = 0.40) and an assessment of argument analysis (d = 0.41). High-ability students entered the project with stronger critical thinking than general-education students (d = .82; d = .41), and high-ability students appeared to benefit more from the intervention as the performance gaps increased in the post-test phase (d = 1.08; d = .80) suggesting possible aptitude-treatment interactions or the Matthew effect. Qualitative data indicated that students learned to (a) think on the spot, (b) analyze arguments, (c) see other perspectives, and (d) construct counter-arguments. This study corroborates previous research that indicated a relationship between high ability and critical thinking.
topic gifted and talented
high ability
middle school
argumentation
debate
critical thinking
argument analysis
adolescents
design-based research
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/journal/3397/article/758473/file/1170808/download
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