CRITICAL THINKING Presentation 9-1
CRITICAL THINKING Presentation 9-1
CRITICAL THINKING Presentation 9-1
Authority
• First judge whether the person in question is
an expert on the issue at hand. Try to judge
whether the expert’s claims are objective by
analyzing the language used.
Objectivity
• Do not consider the person’s claims objective
if the language used is emotional, persuasive
and filled with rhetoric ploys.
Accuracy
• When encounter with any information, see
who is providing the information, explanation
of methods used to obtain the information,
list of references and sources used, evidence
that the content was reviewed by other
authorities for accuracy, a lack of obvious
errors or omissions, information on how
studies were conducted and analysed, a lack
of spelling, grammatical and typographical
errors and visible care taken to detect all of
these problems and avoid content errors.
Coverage
• See if all the things that are in question have
been addressed by the information provided.
Relevance
• See if the information provided is relevant for
the issue at hand. See if you really need the
information at all, practicable and useful.
Time aspect
• How current the information is and how
relevant is it to today’s phenomenon. Old and
outdated information should be avoided.
CRITICAL THINKING AND CRITICAL
READING.
• Critical thinking is a technique for evaluating
information and ideas, for deciding what to
accept and believe.
• Critical reading is a technique for discovering
information and ideas within a text.
ways by which one can evaluate an
academic work or a text from a newspaper.