Critical Thinking Skills
I have a serious concern. I see evidence around me that as a
society, we lack the ability to think critically. We are superficial. We are
self absorbed. And, we cannot think beyond the topical level. If my perceptions
are correct, this lack of critical thinking skills can have a large negative
impact on all aspects of our society.
There are seven levels of thinking and evaluation. However, many
I meet use one, two, or three at the most. And it is thinking at the fourth
through seventh levels that brings success.
Here are the seven levels of thinking and evaluation. The first
four levels come from Donald Kirkpatrick's work (1994). The fifth level from
Jack Phillips (1996). The sixth level from Kaufman and Keller (1992). And, the
seventh level from O'Brien (2003).
Level 1) Did you like it. Was the experience enjoyable? Maybe
people call this the smiley face level of thinking or evaluation. This is often
the major criterion used to assess worth and value. Problem is, not everything
of value in life is always fun, exciting, or pleasurable.
Level 2) Did you learn something? At this level, one can ask,
"Do I know more than I did before the experience?" Or, "Will I
know more after the experience if I do it?" Growth requires learning, so this
is a necessary step toward personal improvement and the widening of our
knowledge, skills, and attitudes.
Level 3) Can you apply what you learned? This stage is where the
separation of individuals begins to occur. Here, we not only have to have
learned something, we must be able to apply what we learned. Many learn new
information through passive activities like listening or reading. Fewer try to
apply what they've learned in their daily lives.
Level 4) Did it make a difference? This stage rates performance.
After we applied what we've learned, did it improve our performance
significantly compared to pre-experience levels?
Level 5) Was it worth the time, energy, and effort? This is the
return on investment level. First we determine, "yes, what we learned and
applied did have a measurable, positive impact on our lives." Then, we
decide whether the size of improvement was worth the price paid to attain it.
This is not only a monetary consideration. It includes all energy, effort, and
resources used to affect the change.
Level 6) Did society benefit? If an experience, event or
situation is worth the effort, we now ask "what impact did it have on
society?" Ethically, if anything we do has a negative impact on the
environment or other people, we should not engage in it. This holds true,
regardless of how profitable it is. Tobacco is an example of a highly
profitable product that an ethical person should not deal with.
Level 7) Is it in line with your purpose in life? Initially,
this is the seventh level of thinking and evaluation. Even if something passes
through the first six screens, if it does not align with your purpose in life,
it is an activity to avoid. There is no neutral area here. Either something
takes you closer to the fulfillment of your life's purpose or it takes you away
from it. Once you are clear on your purpose in life, this then becomes the
first step when considering ideas, propositions and contemplated actions. If it
passes the screen of purpose, then you can run it through the other six steps.
Once you know your purpose, you can drop most ideas quickly
because they don't align with your purpose. Also, have your second level of
evaluation be the societal screen. If it makes it past your purpose, but fails
the societal screen, take two actions. First, drop the idea. And second,
reevaluate your purpose to see how and why it fails to align with the good for
society level of evaluation.
If you use this seven step process to think about and evaluate
your life, you will avoid many false starts and ethical dilemmas or conflicts.
Remember, when you think on the societal level, don't use situational ethics.
Use a strict, "does it help anyone, or does it hurt them," filter.
Hold yourself to a high standard, even if others around you don't.
8 Steps to solution
If at first
you don't succeed, try and try again." That cliché is old and often
followed. "Insanity is repeating the same behavior and expecting a
different result," Erhart.
That line
shows the fallacy of blindly following the first quote. If we fail or
experience a setback, and simply try again in the same way, why should we
expect a different result?
The
difference between success and failure often lies within the plan used in our
approach. If we have no formal plan, we risk failure at every turn. If we have
a plan that follows no logical progression, it will be an ineffective plan.
Here is an eight step model for success. It originally comes from the realm of
academics and instructional design.
Now it is an integral part of the Human and Organizational
improvement movement. It has a simple name, the ADDIE Model: analyze, design,
develop, implement and evaluate.
This
original form has five steps. I have expanded it to eight steps: AADDIIEE.
1) Assess
the situation or problem. What are all the parts and pieces? Who is involved?
How are they involved?
2) Analyze
the information gathered during your assessment. Once you have identified all
the parts ask yourself, "What role does each of these play? How important
are each of these in relationship to the others? Are any of these critical? Are
any of these unnecessary?"
3) Design a
plan or approach to the problem. Based on the first two steps, how do you think
you should approach the problem or situation? What is the most logical way to
approach this? Create an outline of each major step you will follow.
4) Develop
the parts of the plan into a working model. Now, fill in the outline. How will
you actually perform step one? How will it become step two? Repeat this filling
out process until you have a detailed, itemized plan.
5) Implement your plan and see how it works.
"Taking action is the ultimate requirement to achieve the success you
want,” Zakaryan. A good plan is no plan until you act on it. Plan to a point
then get going. Those who are afraid of failing, do, because they never try.
6) Iterate,
or refine and retry. Watch and take notes as you carry out your plan. What
works? What doesn't? Why? How can you improve the plan? What should you change,
adjust or drop? Make changes as you continue to work towards success. Make the
changes. Keep trying. See how those changes affect the plan.
7) Evaluate
how effective you are at each step of this process. Look for ways to improve
and make your approach both more effective and efficient. The easiest way to
determine progress is simply to ask, "Am I, closer to or farther away from
my goals?" Once you have an effective plan that works, you can begin to
make it more efficient to make it work better and faster.
8) Endure,
keep refining and retrying until you find what works. This is where the try and
try again method is a good idea. However, make sure with each new effort, that
you have refined your process and have learned from each of your prior
setbacks. It might sound complicated and difficult. It isn't. It is, however,
systematic and should increase your chances for success. Obviously, you don't
need to use a process like this on simple situations; either of the cantaloupes
at the grocery store will probably be fine. It is a good approach for major
decisions or obstacles you face in life. With practice, you will automatically
run through the eight steps without thinking about it. Once you are to that
point, your success rate will likely be much higher than it was before you read
this article.
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