Researcher Development

Researcher-Development-Framework-RDF-Vitae.pdf

(From https://student.unsw.edu.au/critical-thinking)

The top three intellectual behaviours

The top three intellectual behaviours: Analysis, evaluation, and creating; are considered higher levels of thinking and help us to demonstrate our critical thinking.

  • Analysis refers to the process of examining the parts of a whole, the causes and results of events, and the differences between phenomena. For example, an economics student may be asked to analyse the causes of the global financial crisis of 2008-2009. To get a high mark, the student would have to do more than describe what happened. He/she would be expected to name the main factors, explain which of these were the most important, and consider how the crisis could have been avoided.

  • Evaluation may seem the most difficult, because it involves expressing opinions about the work of other people or expressing a justification for choices or ideas. It must follow from the other types of thinking, because you must understand the theories and ideas of a subject area in order to evaluate them successfully. For example, the engineering student solving a design problem that has many possible solutions. The student would choose the best solution by identifying, comparing and testing the theories and ideas related to the design problem.

  • Creating is the process of joining or combining information and ideas from different sources to create something new. To create, you must be familiar with existing knowledge and practices in your field and be able to take parts of them to combine in new ways. Consider education students designing lesson plans based on educational theories and combining techniques from different sources with their own ideas. Even if no single part of the plan is original, the 'mix' is unique.

* Adapted from Krathwohl D. (2002) A revision of Bloom's taxonomy: An overview. In Theory into Practice, Vol 41, No.4, College of Education; Ohio State University.