Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies

<p> As part of the National Common Core Curriculum, critical thinking skills are expected to be taught by teachers in every subject and at every grade level. Teachers will also be evaluated on teaching critical thinking skills to students to a mastery level as part of the educators' annua...

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Main Author: Skaggs, Helen Renee
Language:EN
Published: Piedmont College 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3722955
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-37229552015-10-22T03:53:07Z Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies Skaggs, Helen Renee Educational evaluation|Cognitive psychology <p> As part of the National Common Core Curriculum, critical thinking skills are expected to be taught by teachers in every subject and at every grade level. Teachers will also be evaluated on teaching critical thinking skills to students to a mastery level as part of the educators' annual evaluations. However, there is not a common definition for critical thinking established by the National Governors Association for Best Practices, Council of Chief State School Officers. Nor is there equitable training on how to teach critical thinking skills to students to mastery level. The following qualitative case study consists of survey question, interviews, and observations of one English department in a rural county to determine the answer to the overarching research question, "What do teachers know about critical thinking?" Paul and Elder's Critical Thinking Model (2007) was used as benchmark to determine what knowledge and what gaps were present amongst the teachers. Teachers defined critical thinking individually, determined what activities encouraged good critical thinking practices, discussed obstacles that deterred the teaching of critical thinking skills in the classroom, and suggested how to prepare teachers to better teach critical thinking skills to meet national expectations. Although the definitions and activities often varied between educators, all agreed that a common definition was necessary. Lack of time and lack of training were the biggest obstacles perceived by the participants.</p> Piedmont College 2015-10-20 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3722955 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Educational evaluation|Cognitive psychology
spellingShingle Educational evaluation|Cognitive psychology
Skaggs, Helen Renee
Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies
description <p> As part of the National Common Core Curriculum, critical thinking skills are expected to be taught by teachers in every subject and at every grade level. Teachers will also be evaluated on teaching critical thinking skills to students to a mastery level as part of the educators' annual evaluations. However, there is not a common definition for critical thinking established by the National Governors Association for Best Practices, Council of Chief State School Officers. Nor is there equitable training on how to teach critical thinking skills to students to mastery level. The following qualitative case study consists of survey question, interviews, and observations of one English department in a rural county to determine the answer to the overarching research question, "What do teachers know about critical thinking?" Paul and Elder's Critical Thinking Model (2007) was used as benchmark to determine what knowledge and what gaps were present amongst the teachers. Teachers defined critical thinking individually, determined what activities encouraged good critical thinking practices, discussed obstacles that deterred the teaching of critical thinking skills in the classroom, and suggested how to prepare teachers to better teach critical thinking skills to meet national expectations. Although the definitions and activities often varied between educators, all agreed that a common definition was necessary. Lack of time and lack of training were the biggest obstacles perceived by the participants.</p>
author Skaggs, Helen Renee
author_facet Skaggs, Helen Renee
author_sort Skaggs, Helen Renee
title Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies
title_short Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies
title_full Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies
title_fullStr Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Critical Thinking in the English Content Area| A Case Study of Teacher Perceptions of Instructional Strategies
title_sort critical thinking in the english content area| a case study of teacher perceptions of instructional strategies
publisher Piedmont College
publishDate 2015
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3722955
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