Unless you are a detective, a teacher or a literature buff, you probably don’t give critical thinking the time of day. Getting to the core of issues and understanding hidden implications is hard work. Most of us seem never to have the time, or when we do, we lack the energy.
But what’s the long-term effect when we turn away from deep reflection as a way to navigate the world’s challenges? Has reading with a discerning eye become a lost art?
And do our schools still give it the needed focus?
These and other aspects of critical thinking are woven throughout The DNA of Collaboration. It is an essential thread in the process of solving problems, not to mention the important work of framing our ideas in the first place. In the book, I touch on the core elements in Chapters 1 and 2, expand on them as we unpack collaboration, then pull all of the dimensions together in Chapter 20, making the case for why deep discernment skills are so important.
Let’s define ‘critical thinking’ in the learning context as: ‘deep & thorough analysis on many dimensions of problem or idea’.
With that as a foundation, let’s look at several key aspects of this in today’s Virtual Book Tour conversation, 12/15 11aET:
- Q1. Is our ability to discern fact from opinion losing ground?
- Q2. Experts approach & define #criticalthinking differently. How do OD & KM treat this, compared with EDU?
- Q3. Where does #criticalthinking show up in the workplace?
- Q4. Where & when in school must #criticalthinking be tackled?
- Q5. The 21st century may need a dose of Descartes or Kant; what can we still learn from classic philosophy?
To me, collaborators must be hungry for answers. Critical thinking must be a part of our learning DNA. It’s how we’ll survive the 21st Century. I hope you’ll join us as we start to discuss the why and the how.
See you online. To join the conversation, click here.
– Chris Jones, author, @sourcepov