Question 4 – What activities will enable students to learn?
	Part of teachers’ professional responsibilities involves  translating learner outcomes into meaningful learning activities (see Alberta  Education Directive 4.2.1. in bibliography).  Wiggins and McTighe caution teachers against the danger of merely  "covering" the curriculum and suggest instead that the teachers’ goal  is to help students "uncover" and discover the curriculum. The  Critical Thinking Consortium (TC2) maintain that the uncovering of  curriculum occurs only when students investigate purposeful questions that  present meaningful problems or challenges to address. Even well planned,  interesting, colourful and relevant learning activities can fail to involve  students in thinking meaningfully about the ideas.  
	Simply asking students to think will not yield critically  thoughtful students. Planned, purposeful instruction is needed to provide  students with the intellectual tools they need to think critically. Background  Knowledge, Criteria for Judgement, Critical Thinking Vocabulary, Thinking  Strategies and Habits of Mind are powerful means to scaffold student learning  and guide students as they interact with the content of the curriculum. 
	Figure 2 represents the foundational role the  intellectual tools play in promoting critical thinking.     
	  
    Figure 2: Promoting Critical Thinking © The  Critical Thinking Consortium (TC2) 
	 
     
	
	  Background  Knowledge is essential in order for critical thinking to occur. Students  require information on which to base their reasoning, judgements, decisions,  and so forth. Critical thinking instruction is best achieved when embedded  within authentic curricular content. The content of the program of studies can  be taught in a more meaningful way when taught through the skills of critical  thinking. Both content and skills are important.  
	  Criteria for  Judgement form the basis for making reasoned judgement. This intellectual  tool has broad application. People use criteria when making decisions on a  daily basis from what to wear given the weather and the day’s activities; what  to eat based on what is available, dietary restrictions and personal  preferences; how to spend leisure time; and other decisions ranging from  trivial to important. What moves these kinds of low-level responses into the  realm of critical thinking is the awareness that is brought to the  decision-making process; that is, being aware of the criteria and applying them  thoughtfully. 
	  Teachers use criteria when translating learner outcomes  into meaningful learning activities. When planning instruction, they decide  what’s important and identify the evidence they need to determine that learning  has occurred. Inviting students into the assessment conversation deepens  student understanding of the learning goals and increases the opportunity for  success.  
	  Critical Thinking Vocabulary refers to essential concepts and  distinctions that are needed to process information in a critically thoughtful  manner. Examples of such concepts within the social studies learner outcomes include:  
	  
	    - support and conclusion
 
	    - cause and effect
 
	    - evidence and inference
 
	    - bias and objectivity
 
	    - validity and reliability
 
	    - fact and opinion 
 
       
	  These complex concepts require  specific instruction, ongoing modelling and labelling before they become part  of a student’s repertoire of critical thinking skills. 
	  Thinking Strategies are used extensively when working through challenges and problems. They  become part of a personal bank of strategies to draw on during problematic  situations. Part of learning to think critically is to be aware of the  strategies and make purposeful decisions as to which strategy will best achieve  the goals of the particular challenge based on reasoned judgement. Thinking  strategies embedded within the social studies learner outcomes include use and  development of decision-making models; use of graphic organizers; application  of inquiry models; and communication skills such as note-taking, media literacy  and presentation skills. 
	  Habits of Mind are personal  qualities that facilitate good thinking. They are commitments to the range of values and principles of a careful and  conscientious thinker, such as being open-minded, fair-minded, accepting and  reflective. These intellectual tools are often taught incidentally;  critical thinking requires purposeful teaching of these habits of mind, with  opportunities to use and reflect on them, planned into the instructional  sequence.  
     
	The  intellectual tools provide opportunities for students to interact with the  content of the program of studies in meaningful ways. Critical thinking is a  methodology that is infused throughout the curriculum. It can and should happen  in virtually every context of learning – from reading to note taking to complex  project work.  
	Critically thoughtful learners are metacognitive. They  think about their learning and can articulate what quality looks like. They are  developing the habits of mind that allow them to  recognize the value of formative feedback. They see purpose and value in their  work.
    
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