CHAPTER 9 THINKING CRITICALLY IN THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL LEARN: What it means to think critically, and why it is important What facts and opinions are, and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Passage Based Reading for the Sat
Advertisements

Asking the Right Questions: Chapter 1
THINKING. Critical Thinking
Writing Workshop II Persuasive Writing.
Determining the Author’s Purpose, Tone, Point of View, and Intended Audience Chapter 10.
Evaluating an Author’s Argument. © 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education Chapter 11: Evaluating an Author's Argument 2 Author’s Argument An author’s argument.
The Essence of Critical Thinking the reasoned identification and evaluation of evidence to guide decision making analysis the form and content of evidence.
Why study Logic?. Logic is of the greatest importance. Logic is one of the most important courses in a classical education. It is the only course that.
Minnesota State Community and Technical College Critical Thinking Assignment Example and Assessment.
Critical Thinking Skills: Reading and Communication.
Definitions – John Dewey
Critical Reading Skills Questioning, Comparing, and Evaluating.
Chapter 9: Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions
Chapter 11: Evaluating an Author’s Argument
Strategies to Achieve Reading Success
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt WORD S.
Argument vs Persuasion vs Propaganda Evidence matters!
Making a Claim Grounds for Claim Evaluation Beyond Brainstorm.
Responding Critically to Texts
BUS 290: Critical Thinking for Managers
SOCIAL STUDIES Unit 1: Thinking Critically. Unit Overview Critical Thinking Perception Thought Patterns Problem Solving Facts Vs. Opinions Propaganda.
Maniac Magee Literary Elements.
LAA 247 Primary Sources, Information from Research, Interpreting Graphics.
Opinions and Commonplace Assertions VS. Facts
Debate 101 Brand. Class Rules We are respectful We are considerate We listen the first time We will be present We are responsible What are some of the.
Chapter 4 Main Ideas and Paragraph Structure
English Language Services
UNIT THREE READING SKILLS NARROW INFERENCES AND WRITER’S VIEW & PURPOSE.
PA State Reading Anchors Forms of questions from the test Click for index of Anchors Click to browse anchors and questions.
Argumentation.
Reading Comprehension Skills and Reading Closely.
© 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers. Chapter 11: Critical Reading Breaking Through: College Reading, 7/e Brenda Smith.
Bell Ringer Review: 1.How many times should you read a text? 2.What are the different focuses for each time you read.
World Languages Department New Haven Professional Development Day October 1, 2007.
Fallacious reasoning is “false thinking.” People use fallacious reasoning when they draw incorrect or false conclusions. Fallacious reasoning may be either.
Academic Vocabulary Unit 7 Cite: To give evidence for or justification of an argument or statement.
BBI 3215 CRITICAL THINKING AND READING Facts vs. opinion.
Critical Reading Skilled readers can recognize an author’s point and the support for that point. Critical readers can evaluate an author’s support for.
Two Types of Argument 1.Arguing a Position 2.Arguing a Solution.
Critical Thinking  A key academic skill  Required for successful study.
1 Lesson 7: Arguments SOCI Thinking Critically about Social Issues Spring 2012.
What is the difference?. Persuasion: is convincing someone to do something with a diplomatic and logical manner Propaganda: the systematic attempt to.
Making Inferences and Drawing Conclusions. Definitions An inference is a logical conclusion that is based on what an author has stated. A conclusion is.
Part 4 Reading Critically
Chapter 3 What are the reasons?.
Part 4 Reading Critically
Chapter 9: Critical Thinking
click your mouse or hit enter to advance animation
Chapter 8: Recognizing Arguments
Chapter 9: Critical Thinking
Thinking In College In this lesson, we’ll explore what it means to be a college-level thinker, and how to develop strong thinking skills. Any questions.
Critical Thinking Process
Fact and Opinion.
Critical Thinking Skills
Today You will need two sheets of paper. One on which to take notes One for an assignment that you will turn in You will also need something with which.
Thinking In College In this lesson, we’ll explore what it means to be a college-level thinker, and how to develop strong thinking skills. Any questions.
Know Your Reading Strategies
Reading Street Comprehension Skills: Fact and Opinion
Argumentative Writing & Persuasive Techniques
Fact and Opinion.
STEP 10 CRITICAL READING p. 399
Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
Determining the Author’s Purpose, Tone, Point of View, and Intended Audience Chapter 10.
Fact and Opinion.
Determining the Author’s Purpose, Tone, Point of View, and Intended Audience Chapter 10.
Critical Reading Skills
9th Literature EOC Review
Critical Thinking Skills
Making Inferences.
Critical, creative and problem solving skills
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 9 THINKING CRITICALLY IN THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL LEARN: What it means to think critically, and why it is important What facts and opinions are, and why it is important to be able to distinguish between them What inferences are, and why it is important to make logical inferences

What is thinking critically, and why is it important? Thinking critically is thinking in an organized way about material in order to evaluate it accurately. To think critically, you can use the skills of: Distinguishing between facts and opinions Drawing logical inferences and conclusions

What are facts and opinions, and why is it important to be able to distinguish between them? Fact: Something that can be proved to exist or to have happened. Opinion: Something that cannot be proved or disproved; a judgment or belief. When an author includes opinions, it is important for you to evaluate these opinions, because not all opinions are valid or useful. Although opinions cannot be proved, they can be supported by valid reasons and reasonable evidence.

An opinion is valuable if it is well-supported. Well-supported means that the author presents facts and logical reasons for the opinion that he or she holds. Well-supported opinions can be as important and as useful as facts. Opinions represent judgments, beliefs, or interpretations.

Words and phrases that indicate that the author is presenting an opinion: In our opinion Many experts believe Many people think that It seems likely This suggests In our view In the opinion of Perhaps Apparently It seems It appears Presumably One possibility is One interpretation is

Words that indicate value judgments: wealthy successful fascinating effective humorous pleasant greatest best worst excellent interesting beautiful

To distinguish between facts and opinions when reading critically, ask yourself the following questions in this order: Can the information in the statement be proved? If so, it is correct information, and therefore, a fact. Can the information in the statement be disproved? If so, it is simply incorrect information. Is the information in the statement something that cannot be proved or disproved? If so, it is an opinion. (If it is an opinion, consider how well-supported it is.)

If a statement can be proved it is a fact (valuable information) can be disproved it is incorrect information (of no value) cannot be proved or disproved it is an opinion which will be a well-supported opinion (valuable) poorly supported or unsupported opinion (of no value)

When the statement is opinion, ask yourself these additional questions: Is the opinion well-supported? (That is, is it based on valid reasons and plausible evidence?) If so, it is a valuable opinion. Is the opinion poorly supported or unsupported? If so, it is of little or no value.

What are inferences, and why is it important to make them? Inference: A logical conclusion based on what an author has stated. A critical thinker understands not only what an author states directly, but also what the author suggests or implies. Inferences go beyond what the author states, but they are always based on what the author has said. A logical conclusion is a decision that is reached after thoughtful consideration of information the author presents.

If you are thinking critically as you read, you should ask yourself, “What logical inference (conclusion) can I make, based on what the author has stated?” To make an inference, the reader must deduce, or reason out, the author’s meaning.

Things to keep in mind when thinking critically: Facts and opinions may or may not appear together. Authors sometimes present opinions in such a way that they appear to be facts. There are other critical thinking skills that can also be used to evaluate written material. Detecting an author’s bias (the author favors one side of an issue over the other) Recognizing propaganda techniques Recognizing fallacies Recognizing illogical arguments or support

AFTER READING THIS CHAPTER, YOU SHOULD KNOW: What it means to think critically, and why it is important What facts and opinions are, and why it is important to be able to distinguish between them What inferences are, and why it is important to make logical inferences