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How to Teach Your Child to Be a Critical Thinker

Blue Planet Studio / iStockphoto

What Is Critical Thinking?

  • Importance of Critical Thinking

Benefits of Critical Thinking Skills

  • Teach Kids to Be Critical Thinkers

Every day kids are bombarded with messages, information, and images. Whether they are at school, online, or talking to their friends, they need to know how to evaluate what they are hearing and seeing in order to form their own opinions and beliefs. Critical thinking skills are the foundation of education as well as an important life skill. Without the ability to think critically, kids will struggle academically, especially as they get older.

In fact, no matter what your child plans to do professionally someday, they will need to know how to think critically, solve problems, and make decisions. As a parent, it's important that you ensure that your kids can think for themselves and have developed a healthy critical mindset before they leave the nest.

Doing so will help them succeed both academically and professionally as well as benefit their future relationships. Here is what you need to know about critical thinking, including how to teach your kids to be critical thinkers.

Critical thinking skills are the ability to imagine, analyze, and evaluate information in order to determine its integrity and validity, such as what is factual and what isn't. These skills help people form opinions and ideas as well as help them know who is being a good friend and who isn't.

"Critical thinking also can involve taking a complex problem and developing clear solutions," says Amy Morin, LCSW, a psychotherapist and author of the best-selling books "13 Things Mentally Strong People Don't Do" and "13 Things Mentally Strong Parents Don't Do."

In fact, critical thinking is an essential part of problem-solving, decision-making, and goal-setting . It also is the basis of education, especially when combined with reading comprehension . These two skills together allow kids to master information.

Why Critical Thinking Skills Are Important

According to the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), which evaluated 15-year-old children in 44 different countries, more than one in six students in the United States are unable to solve critical thinking problems. What's more, research indicates that kids who lack critical thinking skills face a higher risk of behavioral problems.

If kids are not being critical thinkers, then they are not thinking carefully, says Amanda Pickerill, Ph.D. Pickerill is licensed with the Ohio Department of Education and the Ohio Board of Psychology and is in practice at the Ohio State School for the Blind in Columbus, Ohio.

"Not thinking carefully [and critically] can lead to information being misconstrued; [and] misconstrued information can lead to problems in school, work, and relationships," she says.

Critical thinking also allows kids to gain a deeper understanding of the world including how they see themselves in that world. Additionally, kids who learn to think critically tend to be observant and open-minded.

Amy Morin, LCSW

Critical thinking skills can help someone better understand themselves, other people, and the world around them. [They] can assist in everyday problem-solving, creativity, and productivity.

There are many ways critical thinking skills can benefit your child, Dr. Pickerill says. From being able to solve complex problems in school and determining how they feel about particular issues to building relationships and dealing with peer pressure, critical thinking skills equip your child to deal with life's challenges and obstacles.

"Critical thinking skills [are beneficial] in solving a math problem, in comparing and contrasting [things], and when forming an argument," Dr. Pickerill says. "As a psychologist, I find critical thinking skills also to be helpful in self-reflection. When an individual is struggling to reach a personal goal or to maintain a satisfactory relationship it is very helpful to apply critical thinking."

Critical thinking also fosters independence, enhances creativity, and encourages curiosity. Kids who are taught to use critical thinking skills ask a lot of questions and never just take things at face value—they want to know the "why" behind things.

"Good critical thinking skills also can lead to better relationships, reduced distress, and improved life satisfaction," says Morin. "Someone who can solve everyday problems is likely to feel more confident in their ability to handle whatever challenges life throws their way."

How to Teach Kids to Be Critical Thinkers

Teaching kids to think critically is an important part of parenting. In fact, when we teach kids to be critical thinkers, we are also teaching them to be independent . They learn to form their own opinions and come to their own conclusions without a lot of outside influence. Here are some ways that you can teach your kids to become critical thinkers.

Be a Good Role Model

Sometimes the best way to teach your kids an important life skill is to model it in your own life. After all, kids tend to copy the behaviors they see in their parents. Be sure you are modeling critical thinking in your own life by researching things that sound untrue and challenging statements that seem unethical or unfair.

"Parents, being the critical thinkers that they are, can begin modeling critical thinking from day one by verbalizing their thinking skills," Dr. Pickerill says. "It’s great for children to hear how parents critically think things through. This modeling of critical thinking allows children to observe their parents' thought processes and that modeling lends itself to the child imitating what [they have] observed."

Play With Them

Children are constantly learning by trial and error and play is a great trial and error activity, says Dr, Pickerill. In fact, regularly playing with your child at a very young age is setting the foundation for critical thinking and the depth of their critical thinking skills will advance as they develop, she says.

"You will find your child’s thinking will be more on a concrete level in the earlier years and as they advance in age it will become more abstract," Dr. Pickerill says. "Peer play is also helpful in developing critical thinking skills but parents need to be available to assist when conflicts arise or when bantering takes a turn for the worse."

As your kids get older, you can play board games together or simply spend time talking about something of interest to them. The key is that you are spending quality time together that allows you the opportunity to discuss things on a deeper level and to examine issues critically.

Teach Them to Solve Problems

Morin says one way to teach kids to think critically is to teach them how to solve problems. For instance, ask them to brainstorm at least five different ways to solve a particular problem, she says.

"You might challenge them to move an object from one side of the room to the other without using their hands," she says. "At first, they might think it’s impossible. But with a little support from you, they might see there are dozens of solutions (like using their feet or putting on gloves). Help them brainstorm a variety of solutions to the same problem and then pick one to see if it works."

Over time, you can help your kids see that there are many ways to view and solve the same problem, Morin says.

Encourage Them to Ask Questions

As exhausting as it can be at times to answer a constant barrage of questions, it's important that you encourage your child to question things. Asking questions is the basis of critical thinking and the time you invest in answering your child's questions—or finding the answers together— will pay off in the end.

Your child will learn not only learn how to articulate themselves, but they also will get better and better at identifying untrue or misleading information or statements from others. You also can model this type of questioning behavior by allowing your child to see you question things as well.

Practice Making Choices

Like everything in life, your child will often learn through trial and error. And, part of learning to be a critical thinker involves making decisions. One way that you can get your child thinking about and making choices is to give them a say in how they want to spend their time.

Allow them to say no thank-you to playdates or party invitations if they want. You also can give them an allowance and allow them to make some choices about what to do with the money. Either of these scenarios requires your child to think critically about their choices and the potential consequences before they make a decision.

As they get older, talk to them about how to deal with issues like bullying and peer pressure . And coach them on how to make healthy choices regarding social media use . All of these situations require critical thinking on your child's part.

Encourage Open-Mindedness

Although teaching open-mindedness can be a challenging concept to teach at times, it is an important one. Part of becoming a critical thinker is the ability to be objective and evaluate ideas without bias.

Teach your kids that in order to look at things with an open mind, they need leave their own judgments and assumptions aside. Some concepts you should be talking about that encourage open-mindedness include diversity , inclusiveness , and fairness.

A Word From Verywell

Developing a critical mindset is one of the most important life skills you can impart to your kids. In fact, in today's information-saturated world, they need these skills in order to thrive and survive. These skills will help them make better decisions, form healthy relationships, and determine what they value and believe.

Plus, when you teach your kids to critically examine the world around them, you are giving them an advantage that will serve them for years to come—one that will benefit them academically, professionally, and relationally. In the end, they will not only be able to think for themselves, but they also will become more capable adults someday.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA): Results from PISA 2012 problem-solving .

Sun RC, Hui EK. Cognitive competence as a positive youth development construct: a conceptual review .  ScientificWorldJournal . 2012;2012:210953. doi:10.1100/2012/210953

Ghazivakili Z, Norouzi Nia R, Panahi F, Karimi M, Gholsorkhi H, Ahmadi Z. The role of critical thinking skills and learning styles of university students in their academic performance .  J Adv Med Educ Prof . 2014;2(3):95-102. PMID:25512928

Schmaltz RM, Jansen E, Wenckowski N. Redefining critical thinking: teaching students to think like scientists .  Front Psychol . 2017;8:459. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00459

By Sherri Gordon Sherri Gordon, CLC is a published author, certified professional life coach, and bullying prevention expert. 

Free apps to help kids

How to Develop Critical Thinking Skills in Your Kids [in a fun way that won’t feel like learning!]

kid critical thinking definition

🤔 Critical thinking. Problem solving. Logical and lateral thinking. We hear these terms all the time, but what do they actually mean and why do they matter so much?

In this ultimate guide to developing critical thinking skills in kids I will answer this for you AND leave you with some super practical tools and tips to developing these key skills in the comfort of your own home.

Many of the examples I give you will draw from the “ KidCoachApp ” - a simple but innovative app I have developed to help parents build talking and thinking skills in children at home. It’s a really quick, fun and effective method to build critical thinking, taking just five minutes a day and with no preparation or materials required whatsoever!

Let’s get stuck in.

What is critical thinking?

Critical thinking is an ancient concept, dating back to the time of Socrates and Plato. We don’t seem to have one single definition of it, so let me give you a few to paint a decent picture.

Wikipedia defines critical thinking as “the analysis of facts to form a judgment” . They also say that requires “self-directed and self-corrective thinking” and that it develops “effective communication and problem-solving abilities.”

Criticathinking.org says it is “that mode of thinking - about any subject, content, or problem - in which the thinker improves the quality of his or her thinking by skilfully taking charge of the structures inherent in thinking and imposing intellectual standards upon them.”

Global Education company Pearson defines critical thinking as “the purposeful and goal-directed thinking used to define and solve problems, make decisions, and form judgments related to a particular situation or set of circumstances. It involves cognitive, metacognitive and dispositional components which may manifest (or be applied) differently in specific contexts.”

Pretty brainy stuff. 🧠 But don’t worry. This is not meant to be a scientific article on the topic, you will be glad to know!

I want to offer my own very simple definition of critical thinking, specifically for kids.

“Critical thinking for kids is getting them to think, really think, about what they are saying. It is NOT about remembering stuff or being right, but it IS about thinking ‘all the way around’ a problem.”

Sometimes it also helps to explain what something is NOT.

Here are three examples:

❌ If your child did the multiplication 6 x 9 to get 54 that would NOT be critical thinking. ✔️But if they then explained to you all the other ways they could get the number 54, then it could be.

❌If your child memorised the lyrics to their favourite song that would NOT be critical thinking. ✔️But if they compared and contrasted it to lyrics of other songs by the same artist, then it could be.

❌Or if your child watched a clever movie with lots of twists and turns that would NOT be critical thinking. ✔️But if they tried predicting what happens next and based on whether they were right or wrong, refined their predictions for the next scene, that could be.

Is this helping?

The terms problem solving or logical and lateral thinking get used quite a lot too. It basically all means the same thing.

Finally, you might have also heard the term “metacognition” which means “thinking about thinking.” This is a good one to bear in mind also as it makes us ask ourselves things like: “Why do I think this?”, “How could I be wrong?”, “What would other people think?” Metacognition is like when someone is speaking out loud your thoughts!

So, having understood what critical thinking is (or logical or lateral thinking is), let’s look at why it is just so important to develop in our kids.

Why is critical thinking important?

Simply put, critical thinking is a key way of ⭐ differentiating ⭐ our kids and preparing them for their future.

Those that can think critically and for themselves will stand out from those can’t. When our kids emerge into the rapidly-changing world of work, those that have good critical thinking skills will be able to cope the best.

1. The world is changing fast.

Did you know that 85% of the jobs that will exist in 2030 have not even been invented yet? That is according to a study done by the Institute for the Future , in 2017. They cite the increasing amount of technology (think artificial intelligence and machine learning) as carving out thousands of new jobs that we can’t even comprehend today.

Think about your own kids for a moment. What will they do for work?

Maybe one will be a genetic chef 🍲 – coming up with new recipes, analytically put together to be specifically optimised for people based on their genetic profiles?

Maybe another child will be a space traffic controller 🚀 – managing the algorithms computing the many orbital trajectories of shuttles for maximum safety and efficiency?

Or perhaps one will be a virtual reality engineer  👷 – building the new “Zoom” meeting places for employees to work effectively from home?

None of these jobs exist today, but all are completely plausible in just 10 years time.

The chef needs to understand the human genome and think carefully about what goes together, the space traffic controller needs to solve multi-dimensional problems in real time, the virtual reality engineer needs to invent cutting edge new technologies. All of these require massive brain power and ability to think critically in new situations.

Memorising facts just won’t do anymore! ⚠️

And don’t forget – the world will continue to change rapidly, so your kids will constantly have to skill and re-skill in their 20s, 30s, 40s and so on as they launch multiple careers. Maybe they start off in nutrition, then go to transportation, then communication…who knows?

Critical thinking is a transferable skill that your kids can take from one job to another, and will set them up well for life, no matter what decade they are working in.

2. We need better filters

There is a lot of information out there on Google, but the problem is that there is also a lot of disinformation. Knowledge is no longer an issue, but the application of that knowledge is.

I don’t just mean fake news, but also biased sources with agendas.

Take global warming as an example. 🌍

Ask your child to Google “is climate change bad?” See how they interpret what they see. Can they spot the sources and identify biases, for instance climate change activists vs oil companies vs paying advertisers? What other searches could they do to advance their thinking?

Here is a free conversation card you could you use for this exercise, which comes from the KidCoachApp and is a good example of a quick critical exercise you can do with your kids.

(By the way, if you were critically thinking about this article, you might discount what I am saying because I am trying to promote the KidCoachApp . You could, but I hope you don’t, as I really happen to believe in this stuff 😊)

3. Schools can't do enough

Unfortunately most schooling systems are not able to place enough emphasis on critical thinking and related skills. Even if they recognise its importance and want to spend more time on it, their hands are tied and they can’t allocate the necessary timetable space or budget for materials. There is normally just too much pressure to get those high grades in math and English etc.

As the Sutton Trust report of 2017 said: “97% of teachers agree that skills [like critical thinking] are as or more important than academic qualifications” and yet the Princes Trust report in the very same year found that “91% of teachers think schools should be doing more to help students develop [these skills].”

There ARE increasing attempts at embedding critical thinking into every traditional subject taught, for instance the examples I gave above about different ways to make the number 54 (math) or comparing lyrics of songs (English), but many feel this is not happening fast enough.

So what can we as parents do to accelerate this?

What parents need to do at home

The single biggest thing we can do as parents to develop critical thinking skills is to have the right conversations on a daily basis. If we are always asking the right questions, and encouraging our kids to as well, then we are instilling in them fantastic critical thinking skills.

Let’s see how this could pan out over the course of a typical week.

It's Monday and you are helping your child with their homework. Today they are learning all about space, our solar system and the eight planets. To complete the homework all they need to do is draw a diagram of the solar system and label it. But you want to do more and you spot an opportunity to ask some good questions.

💡 While they are working you also ask them how we know there are only eight planets? (it was only a few years ago we included Pluto to be the ninth). You ask how we can be sure they all orbit the Sun? (a few hundred years ago people believed the Earth was at the centre).  You also ask how likely there are more Earth-like planets with life out there (perhaps using this conversation card from the KidCoachApp)?

Do you see how by asking just a few follow-on questions we can easily push their thinking?

It's Wednesday and you are watching the news together. There is a story about some recent lottery winners who have splashed the cash and ended up bankrupt after just one year. Oh dear! You could talk about how silly they are, but you see it as a coaching moment to develop critical thinking skills instead.

💡 So you start to talk about money, and what it can do. You ask them to imagine what it must be like to win the lottery. How would they feel? Can they ever really know until it happens? You ask them to think carefully about how they would spend the money (using this conversation card from the KidCoachApp)?

This approach can work for nearly any news story you happen to watch on the TV - try it out next time!

It's Friday and you have popped to the shops with your child. As an end-of-week treat you bought them a chocolate bar. You are just about to walk home when it starts pouring with rain. You decide to wait it out in the shops. Normally you would check your phone for a while but today you are feeling talkative and you are getting the hang of this “KidCoach” thing.

💡 You start talking about rain. What is it? Why is it important? What would we do without it? When is it helpful? When is it a problem? Then you see the chocolate in your child’s hand, and see how it is still raining, which inspires you to ask something fun and silly like this from the KidCoachApp (which also happens to develop excellent critical thinking skills)!

Kids love silly questions like this -they don't even realise that you are actually building their critical thinking skills, in this case by getting them to think through the pros and cons!

How realistic is it to do something like the above?

I know life as parents is super busy but this approach only takes five minutes a day.

Who doesn’t have five minutes to talk to their child each day? 🧒

Probably the hardest part is having the energy and inspiration to come up with a quick, fun question that gets kids thinking in new ways. That’s where the KidCoachApp massively helps.

We have spent hours curating and testing out the best critical thinking questions for kids! We have also written multiple prompts for each question, which parents say is very handy. These follow best practice methodologies used by many schools and education experts (see for instance the Philosophy For Children approach).

I promise that if you get into the habit of using the KidCoachApp to ask these sorts of questions, you will quickly find yourself coming up with all sorts of amazing questions on the fly based on what your kids are doing. Then you might not even need the app anymore!

THE KEY IS TO DEVELOP THE HABIT.

If we do 5 minutes of sit-ups each morning then we will quickly develop a strong core. 😅

Similarly if we exercise our children’s critical thinking muscles for five minutes every day, through a fun conversation starter, then guess what will happen to their thinking muscle? 🧠

Just find the time in the day that works for you and your family. Some like to do it during the school run, others at dinner time, others before bed.

It doesn’t matter when. Just find a five minute window and start asking great questions!

SOME OTHER THINGS YOU CAN DO.

Questioning our kids is THE best way of developing critical thinking skills in a quick, easy, fun and effective way at home.

For completeness however, I will mention a few more things that we can do as parents. All of these further reinforce the development of critical thinking skills:

❓ Do puzzles, riddles or brainteasers. There are plenty to google but here for instance is a list that spans from fun to serious. I like them since they are quick to ask but take a while to think about.

🎲 Play strategy board games. There are many strategy games available nowadays, see for instance this top 10 list . Chess is my all-time favourite and even playing against the computer is a good way to build critical thinking skills.

📲 Use critical thinking apps for kids. Our “ KidCoachApp ” requires interaction between parent and child, but if you want to park your child in front of the iPad for a while then check out this list. They cover critical thinking skills that also train the brain in terms of memory, concentration and reasoning.

                                                     

Critical thinking frameworks to teach your child

Kids sometimes ask me: “ But what do I think about first?”

This is where thinking frameworks are really handy to help kids deal with new situations. They are a way for your children to create certainty from uncertainty.

Let’s go through some simple examples you can teach them.

1. Think about pros and cons 👍 👎

For any situation that has at least two options / outcomes / answers, simply think of all the reasons for and against, i.e. the pros and cons. A good way of phrasing it for kids is “This would be good because….” and “This would be bad because…”

This teaches them to not jump to a solution but to take the time to consider each side of the argument, before making up their mind a balanced and considered way. It also helps them justify their response if someone asks “Why?”

👉Practice using this conversation card from the KidCoachApp, asking if social media is a good or a bad thing.

2. Ask what would X say? 💬

Perspective is so important. The world is full of diverse backgrounds, opinions and also biases. Let’s encourage our kids to seek out other viewpoints and simply asking “What would X say?” is a powerful way to help yourself see things from different sides.

👉Try it for example on this debating conversation card , on whether children need to go to school or if they can just learn from home! What your mum thinks, what your teacher would say and what your future-self would advise are all likely to be very different.

3. Put on different thinking hats 🎩

Edward de Bono came up with a great tool to help people think in different ways, called 6 Thinking Hats . The idea is that there are different colour hats which resemble different attitudes. For instance: Yellow is optimistic and benefits-led, White is data driven and analytical, Red is gut feel and instinct.

You can even state which hat you are putting on temporarily. This which gives you permission to think in a way that might be unpopular, without fear of being criticised, since you can just take the hat off again e.g. “Putting my black hat on, this will never work since….but putting my green hat on we could try something radical like….”

👉 Practice on this conversation card asking how we can reduce traffic on the roads. If there are pessimistic people in you group saying it just can’t be done, you can say “Well, just putting my Yellow hat on I think we would have far fewer accidents and much less air pollution if we did manage to reduce traffic on the roads. Wouldn’t that be a great thing? So why don’t we think harder about it for a moment? ” Then you can easily switch to a White Hat: “But being realistic and looking at the data, number of people and number of cars being made are just going up and up and up in our country. Maybe we can look at the data from another country to inspire us?”

Do you see how 6 Thinking Hats helps the very same child switch modes of thought seamlessly, by putting on different “hats”?

4. Use thinking moves 🔤

The most advanced framework we will cover here is from a company called DialogueWorks. They are on the Advisory Board for the KidCoachApp, and have come up with a neat list of 26 different thinking moves , one for each letter of the alphabet.

Each thinking move is a way of thinking about a situation task or problem. I find the framework very memorable.

Here are some of the most important ones here, along with the key question you can ask yourself when doing the move.

  • Ahead: what could happen next?
  • Back: what happened the last time?
  • Connect: how do those connect?
  • Divide: how do those differ?
  • Formulate: what ideas can we come up with?
  • Listen/Look: what do you notice?
  • Question: what’s is the best question to ask here?
  • Test: how can we tell if that will work?
  • eXemplify: Can you give me an example?
  • Zoom in/out: what is the bigger picture?      

Practice using this conversation card from the KidCoachApp. It’s a philosophical topic on if you would want to live forever!

Here is how the thinking moves above might play out (just some examples to illustrate):

  • Ahead: If I lived forever I would be able to do so many things
  • ‍ Back: People have tried to live forever in the past but it hasn’t really worked
  • ‍ Formulate: Let’s ask others for ideas on what we could do
  • ‍ Listen/Look: Let’s go talk to someone really old to see what their life is like
  • ‍ Question: Can my family live forever with me too?
  • ‍ Test: How can I try it for awhile but still be able to go back if I want to?
  • ‍ eXemplify: If I lived forever I would be able to travel to Mars one day!
  • ‍ Zoom: I wonder if doing more stuff is really going to make me happy?

I hope these frameworks help. Teach some to your kids to use when faced with a challenging problem to solve!

An example of excellent critical thinking

🏙️ A few years ago Emma was working as a facilities manager of a tall skyscraper in London. There was a problem with the lifts serving all the different companies. She noticed that at lunchtime there were large queues forming on many floors as office workers all wanted to go and get a sandwich at the same time. This was causing irritation and lots of complaint emails were being sent her way!

Being a good critical thinker, she set out to find a nice solution to this problem. Maybe Emma could stagger the lunchtimes by floor somehow? Or maybe she could install sandwich kiosks on some floors? Maybe she could get people to use the stairs? Or did she need to build more lifts and lift shafts?

This could all work but would the issue was that it would require people to either change their behaviour (difficult) or build new things (costly).

Then she “zoomed out” and asked herself, one simple question:

“ Am I solving the right problem? ”

💡 Emma quickly realised she was solving the problem of "long queues", when actually the real problem was "people getting annoyed."

So what did she do?

Her solution was to simply to install full length mirrors next to the lift doors , so while people were waiting they could see themselves and be distracted for a while.

Sounds too simple but it worked! Complaints went way down and people were much happier. Through the power of critical thinking, Emma found a low cost and super effective solution to her problem.

What would your child do in this situation? Here is a free conversation card from the KidCoachApp to guide you.  Try it out tonight!

What is the best age to start?

Right. Now.

Children are naturally good critical thinkers. Their world has no bounds and everything is still possible. So let’s keep nurturing the creativity, curiosity and critical thinking skills from as young an age as possible!

The conversation cards in the KidCoachApp are perfect for 6 – 12 year olds.

As kids grow into adults they will set more boundaries on things, just like we do: “We have always done it like this!” or “That’s not possible.”

Let’s delay this for as long as possible!!!

Let me give you an example.

I was watching TV with my daughter recently and a donation appeal popped up, asking for money to feed hungry children in Africa. My daughter started asking why they are hungry, and I said “Because they are” , and she said “Why can’t we give them more food” , and I said “Because it is difficult” etc. But my daughter kept pressing – “Why? Why? Why?”

And frankly, she has a good point.

There is an awful lot of food in the world, but perhaps it is just not distributed well enough. How much food goes to waste in an average “Western” household, and how could that instead end up feeding the needy in Africa or other places?

Perhaps it requires a next generation of super critical thinkers to break through the commonly accepted “wisdom” of us grown-ups, to find a new way of doing important things.

💚 Raising a child who is a good critical thinking is not just good for them, but will undoubtedly help society also! 💚

10 free critical thinking questions for kids

I've linked to loads of our questions free for you in this article, but I want to give you even more ideas here!

Because I am feeling generous I am including links to some of these complete questions cards in the KidCoachApp , where you will find lots of helpful prompts and guidance. It's normally paid for, although just £4.99 / month and with a completely free 2 week trial, so I think very reasonable.

  • How many iPads do you think there are in the world?
  • ‍ How many grains of sand do you think there are on a typical beach?
  • ‍ If you could go back in time and change one thing, what would it be and why?
  • ‍ How would you improve a sofa to make it better?
  • ‍ If you could have any superpower, what would it be and why?

For the rest of these links you will just have to download the KidCoachApp 😊:

  • How can you make £100 by next week if you wanted to?
  • What would you name a new colour?
  • What are 10 different things you can do a cup?
  • When Baby Shark grows up, will he still be called Baby Shark?
  • What would happen if it never rained?

Does the KidCoachApp really work?

Yes! It really does. 😃

But don’t just take my word for it.

Listen to this TED talk by Ian Gilbert, author of the famous THUNKS – questions to make kids’ brains go ouch! Ian is also a member of our Advisory Board at KidCoachApp , and we have worked with him closely in the development of the app. He said: “What gives anyone the edge is their ability to think - deeply, analytically, critically, creatively, empathically and for themselves. I think the range and quality of the questions in the KidCoachApp will support any parent who wants to give their child that edge."

Or take Jane Slinn , who is the founder of Independent Thinkers tuition agency. She said that: “I always emphasise to parents that they should sustain learning and encourage intellectual curiosity between and beyond weekly tutoring sessions. The KidCoachApp is perfect for this: it provides parents with hundreds of fun, stimulating questions to ask their kids that will get them talking and thinking."

And what about parents themselves? There are countless testimonials to pick from. You could watch what Bhavisha had to say here or read any review on the app stores, like this one from Alison:  

💬 “Fantastic app for developing young minds. This app is a really effective way of helping parents think of interesting topics to discuss with their kids and helps develop communication, confidence, analytical thinking, creativity and more. It supports us in progressing the conversation to get the most from it and has some great topics to discuss. Such a great idea, thank you!”

‍ What shall I do next?

By now you will be excited about how you can effectively build critical thinking skills simply through conversation with your kids. A five minute conversation every other day is so easy to fit in, and we do all the hard work for you putting fantastic thinking questions right in the palm of your hand.

💥To make the most of this, you need to download the KidCoachApp from your usual app store to start your 2 week free trial within seconds. No payment details needed – so you have nothing to lose and everything to gain. After that it is just £4.99/ month, or even cheaper if you go for the annual plan (like many parents do).

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Kavin Wadhar

Kavin Wadhar is a parent of 2 kids and founder of www.KidCoach.app: guided conversations for parents to get their kids talking, thinking and feeling. Kavin left his corporate role in education publishing to pursue his passion to help parents develop in their kids the skills they need to thrive in tomorrow’s world. Working with a team of parents and education experts, Kavin has built an App for parents with hundreds of questions like those in this article, and with additional guidance / prompts to take conversations deeper. Check it out!

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How to explain critical thinking to a child.

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Explaining critical thinking to my preschooler by using fancy words and a vocabulary way out of his reach would only cause us both to tear our hair out.

And I might even have a tantrum.

After all, the definition of critical thinking can be complicated for even an adult to understand: It has to do with the process of observing, applying and evaluating information.

In other words, critical thinking is how you learn from interpreting and experiencing the world around you.

Although the terminology seems daunting at first, there are some simple techniques you can use as an explanation of critical thinking skills to your kiddo who needs these abilities to interpret this fast-paced world.

As a teacher, mother, and researcher, I have learned a few ways to trick your tyke into understanding and practicing critical thinking for kids.

So if you’ve been wondering how to explain critical thinking to a child, here are a few techniques that might keep you both sane.

Encourage free play

We live in an age with so many distractions that sometimes we forget how important it is for our kids just to play.

When a child plays on her own, she will face some challenges that she will have to overcome.

For example, my son remains obsessed with his toy cars and trains. Sometimes a wheel falls off, or the train doesn’t connect right away, and that little boy gets angrier than a hungry rhino.

He’ll expect me to fix it immediately, but most of the time (we all have our moments of giving in, and I am no saint), I tell him that this is his independent playtime, and he must try to figure it out on his own.

I’m not trying to be harsh, but my son would have me putting those trains together every two seconds if I didn’t set some boundaries.

Sorry kiddo, but Mommy has some other things to do.

If he still struggles after a couple of attempts, then I will show him how to complete the task, then tell him to try again next time.

Free play provides one example of how to explain critical thinking to a child by problem-solving a real-life conflict.

If you’re feeling ambitious, you can also set up real-life scenarios. These scenarios can be as basic as playing the old-school version of house.

Your child can even retrieve some pots and pans, and in addition to banging on them, pretend to be a cook.

Your kid could also bust out that fake toolset that grandma got him for Christmas.

For more about this topic, check out one of my other posts: 8 Critical Thinking Activities for Preschoolers that Encourage Imagination.

Pro Tip: Help Your Child Become Better at Critical Thinking

Enroll your child for the Atlas Mission and let your child play with this award-winning educational program. Your child will become better at critical thinking without even realizing it!

Hypothesize: ask questions and brainstorm possibilities

Hypothesize is a big word, but if we break it down, this term just involves asking questions and brainstorming possibilities.

I find myself doing this with my daredevil son daily, mostly by accident: What would happen if you climbed up then stood on that tall stool?

How will you feel after eating a whole bag of chips?

After I ask these questions, my son does take a second to think about the answers.

Does he always come up with the right conclusion? No. But that’s okay. He’s at least evaluating the situation and learning from his own unique experiences.

You can hypothesize with your child in a way that works for you.

Maybe your kid loves sports: You could ask her what would happen if you kicked the ball hard against the tree? What would happen if you change your batting stance? And so on.

Asking questions and forming hypotheses are simple ways to explain critical thinking to a child.

Think about thinking – get down with metacognition

When I taught, the word metacognition  was thrown around a lot during professional development classes.

Don’t worry – all this term means is thinking about thinking.

Parents and children alike are usually running around like crazy chickens with their heads cut off.

We cram in all these activities, and we’re on a mission to do so much. So often, we rarely stop and think about thinking.

Pick a subject – any subject – and you can use metacognition.

For this example, let’s say your child is learning his ABCs. Talk to him about strategies that may work to fulfill that goal.

Perhaps you ask Little Johnny what helps you to remember your ABCs? And he responds, “I love the song.”

He might also say that he likes learning chunks of the song at a time because he can only remember a few letters at a time.

Or, as my son told me, read the book Chicka Chicka Boom Boom over and over and over again.

Bless his heart, and if only there were more hours in a day.

Asking your child about learning strategies that work for your child offers insights that are valuable for both of you.

Plus, there have been studies on metacognition that proves that when you think about thinking, you retain more information. Visit this site for more details on this concept.

Explaining critical thinking to a preschooler and a 12-year-old is very different because they both have different interests and unique mental capacities.

But no matter what their age, they can always learn something from play, hypothesizing, and thinking about thinking.

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Amanda Clark

About the Author

Amanda Clark creates educational content for the Atlas Mission . She is a work-at-home mom with two awesome sons that keep her on her toes. She has written four books of poetry, loves technology, juggling pins, and freelance writing.

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Think About It: Critical Thinking

Use these tips to encourage your child's critical thinking skills..

Critical thinking has become a buzzword in education. In the past, the emphasis in classrooms has been on imparting information and content — the times tables or the capitals of the United States, for example. In recent years, however, there's been a shift toward teaching critical thinking , a skill that elevates thinking beyond memorization into the realm of analysis and logic.

Put another way, critical thinking is about knowing how to think, not what to think. Teachers use a number of techniques to help students learn critical thinking, starting as early as kindergarten and ramping up especially in 2nd grade and beyond. Below are a few of the methods educators employ; you can try them at home to help your child become a critical thinker.

  • Critical thinking: Ask open-ended questions. Asking questions that don't have one right answer encourages children to respond creatively without being afraid of giving the wrong answer.
  • Critical thinking: Categorize and classify. Classification plays an important role in critical thinking because it requires identification and sorting according to a rule, or set of rules, that kids must discover, understand, and apply. If you play classification games at home, be sure to follow up the activity with questions about the similarities and differences between the groups. You can sort everything from dirty laundry to Legos to produce to doll clothes to promote critical thinking.
  • Critical thinking: Work in groups. In a group setting, students are exposed to the thought processes of their peers. Thus, they can begin to understand how others think and that there are multiple ways of approaching problems — not just one correct way.
  • Critical thinking: Make decisions. Help your child consider pros and cons, but don't be afraid to let her make a wrong choice. Then evaluate the decision later. Ask your child, "How do you feel about your decision? What would you do differently next time?"
  • Critical thinking: Find patterns. Whatever you're doing, whether it's going to the park or watching television, encourage your child to look for patterns or make connections for critcal thinking practice. For example, relate a favorite television show to a real-life situation. Or, while driving in the car, have your child identify different shapes in roads signs and in the windows and roofs of passing houses. 

It might be tempting to pass off the critical thinking buzz as just another fad in education. However, most teachers disagree. It's still important for your child to know his multiplication tables, but it's just as vital for him to know how and when to use them.

Looking for strategies or have questions about how to support your child’s education? Ask our AI-powered assistant.

Parent Resources for Learning > How It Begins > 6 Simple Ways to Support Critical Thinking for Ages 2-6 and Up

6 Simple Ways to Support Critical Thinking for Ages 2-6 and Up

by Dr. Jody Sherman LeVos | Aug 4, 2023 | How It Begins

Why Creativity Matters So Much for Kids

As parents, we have a LOT to keep in mind to give our kids the best possible start. So it’s nice to come across a skill set that offers a lot of bang for our buck. When it comes to developing skills that have an outsized impact on a child’s life, critical thinking is a great place to start. 

The Short Cut

  • Critical thinking is the use of logic, reasoning, and executive functioning skills to analyze information and make sound decisions throughout life
  • The ability to think critically matters a lot—it’s linked to better grades, finishing schoolwork, positive job performance, and overall academic success
  • Caregivers can do a lot to encourage critical thinking, from family game nights and library visits to asking open-ended questions
  • Developing the 5 C’s doesn’t need to be complicated. You can make a big difference in only  15 minutes a day !

It turns out that critical thinking is actually more predictive of some pretty important positive life outcomes than raw intelligence, not to mention it’s a set of skills that are predicted to become increasingly important to CEOs and other employers in the future. 

Given the relative importance of critical thinking, let’s dive into what it is and how we as parents can foster these skills from an early age.

What Is Critical Thinking?

Boy pointing at a card while playing a HOMER memory game with his mother

Critical thinking covers an expansive range of processing and problem-solving skills. In terms of processing, it includes the abilities needed to regulate our behaviors and accomplish goals. You may sometimes hear those skills referred to as executive functions. They include:

  • Working memory (our ability to hold small amounts of information in mind for a short period of time while we work on it in some way, such as recalling a telephone number long enough to dial it)
  • Flexible thinking (our ability to focus on one thing at a time, switch to new tasks, and avoid distractions)
  • Self-control (our ability to control our behaviors, follow rules, and understand consequences)

If that sounds like a set of skills your child needs, you’re right! Many important childhood tasks (like listening in school or helping with chores at home) rely on executive functioning.

In terms of problem-solving skills, critical thinking includes things like logic and reasoning, our ability to consider multiple perspectives and adapt to new ways of thinking (including computational thinking and coding), and to make decisions based on evidence rather than bias.

Combine all those skills, and you can see that critical thinking is a pretty big deal! There are many good reasons to focus on this important “C.”

The Impacts of Critical Thinking in School and Life

Critical thinking has been linked to very important outcomes in school, life, and the work world, including better grades, higher likelihood of completing schoolwork, positive job performance in the workplace, and overall academic success. In adults, strong critical thinking has even been correlated with less credit card debt.

That’s a lot for one skill set! According to a study by Duke Learning and Organization Development, critical thinking is one of the most in-demand skills in the workplace, and yet nearly half of all employers indicated that their employees are falling short in it, with a LOT of room to improve.

Given how important critical thinking is, it’s reassuring to know that there’s a lot we as caregivers can do to support it in our kids (and that many of those things are fun!), even if we didn’t necessarily receive the same type of critical thinking support growing up. 

Simple Ways to Support Critical Thinking

Mother talking with her son while resting in a sunny bedroom

1. Model Asking Open-Ended Questions. Demonstrating that you as a grown-up are still curious about the world and asking open-ended questions is a great way to show your kids that processing information and making sense of the world around them is a lifelong endeavor.

2. Demonstrate Multiple Perspectives . This one can be tricky, as many of us have strong opinions about the world, but strive to expose your child to multiple perspectives on a wide range of topics so that they open their minds to new ideas, begin to sort through information, get comfortable asking questions, and learn that sometimes things are not black and white.

3. Practice Active Listening . Critical thinking includes having an open mind, so encourage listening without judgment. Active listening might include making eye contact, leaning forward, ensuring you’re not distracted by something else, asking clarifying questions, and having “calm hands and bodies.”

4. Go to the Library . Ask your local librarian to teach you and your child how to search for information using multiple sources, and what to look for when identifying trustworthy, credible sources versus less credible sources. Sometimes it helps for children to hear things from someone other than their parents (it sure does with mine!). 

5. Flex Those Executive Functioning Skills. Family board game nights are a GREAT way to foster many executive functioning skills (like following rules, using working memory, and staying focused). Additionally, you can make a game out of rehearsing and remembering lists of words or objects to strengthen working memory.

6. Learn to Code . Coding might sound too advanced for younger children, but even preschoolers can learn the basics behind many coding and computational thinking skills, like breaking a complex task down into a series of simple actions (sequencing). There are even some programs, like our award-winning codeSpark app , specifically designed for preschoolers and children in early elementary school.

Critical Thinking across Developmental Stages

Depending on your child’s age and unique developmental trajectory, critical thinking might look a little different for them than for someone else. Below are some checklists you can use to consider what aspects of critical thinking you might be observing in your child. 

Remember, every child develops differently, so you may see things that aren’t on these lists, or that are on the list under a different age from your child’s. That’s almost certainly OK, especially given that critical thinking consists of many skills that aren’t necessarily linear. 

Also, these lists are not exhaustive—there are many other skills within critical thinking that you’re likely encountering at each age and stage. But this should give you a sense of what’s developmentally typical and why various skills matter.

Boy pointing at letters in a book on playroom floor

2-Year-Old Checklist

Can group like items or objects by a category (e.g., all the blue things, all the cars, all the things that are food)

  • This demonstrates an awareness that things can relate to each other and that your child can recognize specific features such as color and function; this a precursor to being able to identify patterns and understand or invent rules for how the world works.

Points to things in a book when you ask questions like “Where is the puppy?”

  • Your child is demonstrating receptive language development, meaning he’s learning the names and labels for things, and he can attend to what you’re asking without getting distracted by other images; both skills are important parts of critical thinking.

Can recall a simple request or command several minutes after it’s been given (e.g., can remember that you asked them to go pick up their toy in their room by the time they walk to their room)

  • Holding information in working memory long enough to take action on that information is a critical part of our executive functioning skills.

Understands simple or common rules, such as sitting at the dinner table or being buckled up in the car

  • This shows your child can understand, remember, and follow rules—an important aspect of executive functioning skills.

3-Year-Old Checklist

Can group like items or objects by more than one category (e.g., all the blue things that are also cars but not trucks)

  • This demonstrates that your child knows things can relate to each other and can recognize specific features such as color and function; this a precursor to being able to identify patterns and understand or invent rules for how the world works.
  • Your child is demonstrating receptive language development, meaning he’s learning the names and labels for things, and he can attend to what you’re asking without getting distracted by other images. Both language and executive function skills are important parts of critical thinking.

Can recall and follow two-step instructions (e.g., “Pick up your towel and put it in the laundry bin”)

  • Holding multiple pieces of information in working memory long enough to take action on that information is a critical part of our executive functioning skills.

Can follow simple rules in collaborative or competitive games

  • Understanding, remembering, and following rules is an important aspect of executive functioning skills.

4-Year-Old Checklist

Knows the name and purpose behind a couple different types of media (e.g., books for reading, radio in the car for music or news, streaming for music) 

  • Recognizing that different devices and platforms serve up different types of content is the new precursor for understanding various forms of news and information.

Can recall and follow two- and three-step instructions (e.g., “Pick up your towel, put it in the laundry bin, and then bring me your socks”)

Recognizes that different people have different opinions and knowledge areas (e.g., a teacher is a trustworthy source of knowledge; a grandparent knows a lot about family history; a mail delivery person knows a lot about mail)

  • Knowing that different people know different things AND that some people are likely more trustworthy than others is an important precursor for being able to critically evaluate information and sources.

Can answer simple function questions, such as “What are shoes for?” or “What is a pencil for?” 

  • Understanding and being able to articulate the function and purpose of something is an important aspect of knowing how things work.

Knows what comes next in a story she’s heard before 

  • When your child can tell you how a story ends or what part comes next, she’s revealing an ability to remember important details over a period of time (and an awareness that some things, like a favorite bedtime story, are stable and don’t change).

Parents playing chess with child

5-Year-Old Checklist

Can point to the names of the author and illustrator of a book (and tell you the difference between those two roles)

  • A foundational aspect of thinking critically about information is knowing who wrote (or illustrated) the work, and how those roles differ and/or complement each other.

Answers comprehension questions after having read a story (or having it read to them), such as questions about what the main lesson of the story was, how the main character may have felt at a specific point in the story, or why the story ended the way it did

  • These types of questions require a child to not just hear or read a story, but to think about what the words mean together and identify big themes and lessons.

Can recall and follow multi-step instructions (e.g., “Put away your book, then grab your blue crayon and bring it to the bin by the window”)

6-Year-Old and Up Checklist

By age 6, many children will be able to follow multi-step instructions without forgetting what they’re supposed to be doing or getting distracted along the way. That’s not to say distractions won’t happen (even I can get pulled into something else on my way to the laundry room, completely forgetting about the laundry until the next day)—but they’re less likely than in younger children. 

This age range is also starting to pick up the nuances of differing opinions on topics within a family. Which sports team is the best, where the family should go on vacation, even some elements of politics—if your family is discussing these things, your child will likely be realizing that not all people share the same ideas.

This is not a bad thing! It’s important for your child to learn that the existence of multiple perspectives on a topic is normal, and that positive, uplifting dialogue about those differences, where various perspectives are respected, can be an enriching environment.

You can support critical thinking as your child navigates this stage by utilizing some of the tips listed above, such as asking open-ended questions, modeling how to be an active listener, and going to the library to do research with your child. Your child will also likely be forming their own opinions at this stage, which is exciting to see. 

Supporting Critical Thinking with Begin

Logos and images of kids playing with the 5 Begin brands: Little Passports, HOMER, Learn with Sesame Street, codeSpark, and KidPass Tutors

Critical thinking is a very important “C” —not just for your child’s short-term development, but for their entire lifespan. The critical thinking skills they learn now will help them achieve the lifelong health and happiness you want for them.

At Begin, we know this, and we include critical thinking activities in almost all of our products—whether it’s solving puzzles in codeSpark , playing memory games in HOMER , building hands-on projects at home with Little Passports , or something else. Check out our comprehensive learning memberships to see how some of our products come together to give your child their best start to achieving their fullest potential.

There are many things you can do to support and reinforce your child’s critical thinking skills. It’s truly a lifelong process of growth and development, and we’re here to help!

Dr. Jody Sherman LeVos

Jody has a Ph.D. in Developmental Science and more than a decade of experience in the children’s media and early learning space.

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Dr. Jody Sherman LeVos

Dr. Jody Sherman LeVos

Chief Learning Officer at Begin

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Critical thinking is a 21st-century essential — here’s how to help kids learn it

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If we want children to thrive in our complicated world, we need to teach them how to think, says educator Brian Oshiro. And we can do it with 4 simple questions.

This post is part of TED’s “How to Be a Better Human” series, each of which contains a piece of helpful advice from someone in the TED community; browse through all the posts here.

We all want the young people in our lives to thrive, but there’s no clear consensus about what will best put them on the path to future success. Should every child be taught to code? Attain fluency in Mandarin, Spanish, Hindi and English?

Those are great, but they’re not enough, says educator and teacher trainer Brian Oshiro . If we want our children to have flexible minds that can readily absorb new information and respond to complex problems, he says, we need to develop their critical thinking skills.

In adult life, “we all have to deal with questions that are a lot more complicated than those found on a multiple-choice test,” he says in a TEDxXiguan talk. “We need to give students an opportunity to grapple with questions that don’t necessarily have one correct answer. This is more realistic of the types of situations that they’re likely to face when they get outside the classroom.”

How can we encourage kids to think critically from an early age? Through an activity that every child is already an expert at — asking questions.

1. Go beyond “what?” — and ask “how?” and “why?”

Let’s say your child is learning about climate change in school. Their teacher may ask them a question like “What are the main causes of climate change?” Oshiro says there are two problems with this question — it can be answered with a quick web search, and being able to answer it gives people a false sense of security; it makes them feel like they know a topic, but their knowledge is superficial.

At home, prompt your kid to answer questions such as “ How exactly does X cause climate change?” and “ Why should we worry about it?” To answer, they’ll need to go beyond the bare facts and really think about a subject.

Other great questions: “ How will climate change affect where we live?” or “ Why should our town in particular worry about climate change?” Localizing questions gives kids, says Oshiro, “an opportunity to connect whatever knowledge they have to something personal in their lives.”

2. Follow it up with “How do you know this?”

Oshiro says, “They have to provide some sort of evidence and be able to defend their answer against some logical attack.” Answering this question requires kids to reflect on their previous statements and assess where they’re getting their information from.

3. Prompt them to think about how their perspective may differ from other people’s.

Ask a question like “How will climate change affect people living in X country or X city?” or “Why should people living in X country or X city worry about it?” Kids will be pushed to think about the priorities and concerns of others, says Oshiro, and to try to understand their perspectives — essential elements of creative problem-solving.

4. Finally, ask them how to solve this problem.

But be sure to focus the question. For example, rather than ask “How can we solve climate change?” — which is too big for anyone to wrap their mind around — ask “How could we address and solve cause X of climate change?” Answering this question will require kids to synthesize their knowledge. Nudge them to come up with a variety of approaches: What scientific solution could address cause X? What’s a financial solution? Political solution?

You can start this project any time on any topic; you don’t have to be an expert on what your kids are studying. This is about teaching them to think for themselves. Your role is to direct their questions, listen and respond. Meanwhile, your kids “have to think about how they’re going to put this into digestible pieces for you to understand it,” says Oshiro. “It’s a great way to consolidate learning.”

Critical thinking isn’t just for the young, of course. He says, “If you’re a lifelong learner, ask yourself these types of questions in order to test your assumptions about what you think you already know.” As he adds, “We can all improve and support critical thinking by asking a few extra questions each day.”

Watch his TEDxXiguan talk now:

About the author

Mary Halton is a science journalist based in the Pacific Northwest. You can find her on Twitter at @maryhalton

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MSU Extension Child & Family Development

The importance of critical thinking for young children.

Kylie Rymanowicz, Michigan State University Extension - May 03, 2016

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Critical thinking is essential life skill. Learn why it is so important and how you can help children learn and practice these skills.

It is important to teach children critical thinking skills.

We use critical thinking skills every day. They help us to make good decisions, understand the consequences of our actions and solve problems. These incredibly important skills are used in everything from putting together puzzles to mapping out the best route to work. It’s the process of using focus and self-control to solve problems and set and follow through on goals. It utilizes other important life skills like making connections , perspective taking and communicating . Basically, critical thinking helps us make good, sound decisions.

Critical thinking

In her book, “Mind in the Making: The seven essential life skills every child needs,” author Ellen Galinsky explains the importance of teaching children critical thinking skills. A child’s natural curiosity helps lay the foundation for critical thinking. Critical thinking requires us to take in information, analyze it and make judgements about it, and that type of active engagement requires imagination and inquisitiveness. As children take in new information, they fill up a library of sorts within their brain. They have to think about how the new information fits in with what they already know, or if it changes any information we already hold to be true.

Supporting the development of critical thinking

Michigan State University Extension has some tips on helping your child learn and practice critical thinking.

  • Encourage pursuits of curiosity . The dreaded “why” phase. Help them form and test theories, experiment and try to understand how the world works. Encourage children to explore, ask questions, test their theories, think critically about results and think about changes they could make or things they could do differently.
  • Learn from others. Help children think more deeply about things by instilling a love for learning and a desire to understand how things work. Seek out the answers to all of your children’s “why” questions using books, the internet, friends, family or other experts.
  • Help children evaluate information. We are often given lots of information at a time, and it is important we evaluate that information to determine if it is true, important and whether or not we should believe it. Help children learn these skills by teaching them to evaluate new information. Have them think about where or who the information is coming from, how it relates to what they already know and why it is or is not important.
  • Promote children’s interests. When children are deeply vested in a topic or pursuit, they are more engaged and willing to experiment. The process of expanding their knowledge brings about a lot of opportunities for critical thinking, so to encourage this action helps your child invest in their interests. Whether it is learning about trucks and vehicles or a keen interest in insects, help your child follow their passion.
  • Teach problem-solving skills. When dealing with problems or conflicts, it is necessary to use critical thinking skills to understand the problem and come up with possible solutions, so teach them the steps of problem-solving and they will use critical thinking in the process of finding solutions to problems.

For more articles on child development, academic success, parenting and life skill development, please visit the MSU Extension website.

This article was published by Michigan State University Extension . For more information, visit https://extension.msu.edu . To have a digest of information delivered straight to your email inbox, visit https://extension.msu.edu/newsletters . To contact an expert in your area, visit https://extension.msu.edu/experts , or call 888-MSUE4MI (888-678-3464).

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How to teach kids critical thinking

How to teach kids critical thinking

Every day more and more people realize how important critical thinking is. In today’s world, full of different information, influencers, web-content, fake news, and various opinions that seem to be facts, critical thinking is one of the biggest superpowers of a mature and competitive personality. So, why not help your child and push him or her to this skill as soon as possible?

To begin with, what is critical thinking, in general? It is a mixture of skills such as decision-making, finding analogies and causal links between events and processes, suggesting hypotheses, etc. Critical thinking is supposed to help you not to get lost in controversial information.

Some people claim that such a model of thinking might mute the flow of creativity in children. However, it’s totally the opposite — critical thinking will help kids broaden mind borders and find a field for new ideas. This skill is essential for everyone, but, as known, children usually learn things faster than adults. So it would be a great idea to explore this kind of thinking from primary school or even earlier.

Why is critical thinking important for kids?

Let’s see in what way critical thinking can improve your child’s life.

  • Firstly, it is a beneficial method to explore the world . If a child learns things using critical thinking, he or she will avoid loads of mistakes and misleadings which could have traumatized him/her.
  • Secondly, this skill makes a mind work faster . When things don’t make sense from first sight — think the situation over with a critical approach, and the puzzle will soon be complete.
  • Thirdly, critical thinking is good support in school subjects . For instance, children with developed thinking habits are more likely to succeed in their exams. Moreover, it will be useful for every kid, no matter what direction he or she chooses. Language learners will improve faster if they use this approach; future inventors will do better with the projects after learning the basics of critical thinking; science pupils will do their research more deeply and consciously.

How to develop critical thinking in a child?

teaching kids critical thinking

But what should adults do to help children gain this skill? There are some tips. They would be useful in your everyday conversations as well as on special seminars.

The easiest way to teach a kid something is to uphold the same principles you want to cultivate in him/her. It never hurts to learn some critical thinking skills yourself. Thus, you will help your child learn essential skills in practice and improve your own way of thinking. Be sure your child will look up to you and, sooner or later, will try to adopt your thinking habits.

No instructions

You probably know that there is a method of teaching children to swim, when an “instructor” just throws a child into the water to awaken his/her survival instincts and, at the same time, watches him/her closely to give a hand at the critical moment. Roughly speaking, the same method is very effective in terms of critical thinking. You let a child do something on his/her own and take all the risks. Afterward, it is necessary to discuss everything and figure out how it could have been done differently. Surely, everything should be within the norm — don’t forget that, first of all, you are a responsible parent.

More questions

Encourage your kid to be curious. Yes, it can be quite exhausting to reply to all the why’s and what’s all day long, but your child will definitely be grateful for it in the future. You’d better teach a child to avoid taking everything for granted. Instead of that, explain to him/her the importance of critical research even in everyday issues. If this useful habit is formed in childhood, there will be much fewer problems in high school and adulthood.

Agree/Disagree

If a person can express his/her agreement or disagreement with something, that means he/she is able to think critically. However, there is a thing — in addition to the statement, it is necessary to attach an explanation. Another way to help a child develop his/her thought is to ask more specifically: Is it right or wrong? True? False? Normal? All these questions will put a child in a position where critical thinking is required.

Good listening

This sort of soft skills is crucial in lots of professions nowadays but, at the same time, it is helpful in everyday life. When a person is a good listener, he/she doesn’t stop talking just for some personal reasons. It means that a person gives another one space and time to express his/her own ideas, without drawing all the attention to oneself. A good listener will not cause pressure and push his/her thoughts when an opponent doesn’t want it. Also, such a person will be sincerely interested in another person and new statements.

Clear meaning

This can be easily illustrated with a school studying. When a child learns something from a history textbook, he/she doesn’t need to learn it by heart. The point is to understand all the processes and causal links and be able to reproduce them in your own words. So, if you are not sure your child gets something right, ask him/her to clarify the meaning of his/her words. Ideally, a kid would explain the point in the narrative but keeping the main sense.

Biases matter

Even some adults often forget how strong the affection of biases could be — not to mention children. It’s a great idea to talk to your child about stereotypes, emotional intelligence, and prejudice and find a common solution on how to overcome their influence on our way of thinking.

All in all, parents and teachers should pay attention to developing their children’s critical thinking but without tight control. The best thing to do is give kids enough freedom to make their own decisions and, simultaneously, be ready to discuss difficulties they might encounter. Although children don’t know much about this world, they are people, only a bit smaller than adults. So treat them with respect, help them explore things, talk to them properly and don’t forget that you were young, too. It’s not much, but it’s an important job to do.

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Critical thinking activities for kids

Finally, we offer you some activities that would be beneficial in learning critical thinking skills. You can practice them all with your child, and in some time, you will find out which one works out for you.

Tell me why

Imagine your kid is telling you a story from school. He or she disapproves of a classmate’s action. Try to develop this thought by asking why this action doesn’t seem right. You can also continue this discussion with a question like “Why should he/she act in a different way?” or “Why wouldn’t you act like this?”.

Question by question

Be cautious not to make a discussion overloaded — just one question at a time. Let’s go on with the same example: we start with a generalization like “Is it always inappropriate to act like this?” encouraging a kid to search for a counter-example. Then we listen to it and put it on a test with a question like “In this particular situation, was there any chance to act differently, or was it a necessity?”

Generally speaking, all sorts of questions help learn critical thinking. Not only make your kid ask as many things as possible but also get yourself into a habit of asking him or her about their mindset. We have already mentioned the importance of the question “Why?” but, in addition to it, you can ask for clarification of some thoughts or for more information on a subject. Show your child that it is significant to be able to support your statements with examples — ask him/her to give you one. Also, one of the main things to do is to link conditions with a situation. To develop this side of skill, ask a child what the particular situation depends on.

Predictions

One side of critical thinking is predicting conclusions, however, not wizard-like but with the help of analytical skills and logic. Ask your child a question, “What would happen if I did this?” and discuss the answer. You can also train this skill while reading or watching a film. At the crisis moment of a plot, try to stop for a second and ask your kid to predict what will happen next and why. This activity develops imagination and creativity, not to mention critical thinking.

Time to write

It is widely known that writing helps students bear new information in mind and make their statements clearer and more reasonable. Though children are not fancy to use pens and copybooks in today’s world, replacing them with laptops and smartphones, it is beneficial to write down your thoughts on paper. Make it a merry game for a kid, like writing a letter to your future self or creating a script for a Hollywood movie. Later on, this will help a child in scientific research in school or university.

Debating club

No matter how close you are with your child, he or she needs other kids of the same age around. They can be found in a debating club — a place where children learn the art of discussion. Some schools offer these facilities but if there is no such place in your school, try to find it someplace in your area. Debating club is an excellent opportunity to raise a child’s self-confidence and improve critical thinking skills via discussions on relevant topics.

To conclude, critical thinking is a crucial part of a strong personality. Like most of the skills, it’s better to teach critical thinking to children — not only because they take in new information faster than grown-ups, but also because it is hard to change an adult person’s mindset. Critical thinking will make your child successful in many ways: from school homework to comfort living in modern post-industrial society.

Mousentist

kid critical thinking definition

Thinking about thinking helps kids learn. How can we teach critical thinking?

kid critical thinking definition

Lecturer in Critical Thinking; Curriculum Director, UQ Critical Thinking Project, The University of Queensland

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Peter Ellerton consults to the Centre for Critical and Creative Thinking. He is a Fellow of the Rationalist Society of Australia.

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Few people doubt the value of developing students’ thinking skills. A 2013 survey in the United States found 93% of employers believe a candidate’s

demonstrated capacity to think critically, communicate clearly, and solve complex problems is more important [the emphasis is in the original] than [their] undergraduate major.

A focus on critical thinking is also common in education. In the Australian Curriculum, critical and creative thinking are known as “ general capabilities ”; the US has a similar focus through their “ common core ”.

Critical thinking is being taught successfully in a number of programs in Australian schools and universities and around the world. And various studies show these programs improve students’ thinking ability and even their standardised test scores.

But what is critical thinking and how can we teach it?

What we mean by critical thinking

There are many definitions of critical thinking that are vague or ill-formed. To help address this, let’s start by saying what critical thinking is not.

First, critical thinking is not just being smart. Being able to recognise a problem and find the solution are characteristics we associate with intelligence. But they are by themselves not critical thinking.

Intelligence, at least as measured by IQ tests, is not set in stone. But it does not seem to be strongly affected by education (all other things being equal), requiring years of study to make any significant difference, if at all. The ability to think critically, however, can improve significantly with much shorter interventions, as I will show.

Read more: Knowledge is a process of discovery: how constructivism changed education

Second, critical thinking is not just difficult thinking. Some thinking we see as hard, such as performing a complex chemical analysis, could be done by computers. Critical thinking is more about the quality of thinking than the difficulty of a problem.

So, how do we understand what good quality thinking is?

Critical thinkers have the ability to evaluate their own thinking using standards of good reasoning. These include what we collectively call the values of inquiry such as precision, clarity, depth and breadth of treatment, coherence, significance and relevance.

I might claim the temperature of the planet is increasing, or that the rate of deforestation in the Amazon is greater than it was last year. While these statements are accurate, they lack precision: we would also like to know by how much they are increasing to make the statement more meaningful.

Or I might wonder if the biodiversity of Tasmania’s old growth forests would be affected by logging. Someone might reply if we did not log these forests, jobs and livelihoods would be at risk. A good critical thinker will point out while this is a significant issue, it is not relevant to the question .

kid critical thinking definition

Critical thinkers also examine the structure of arguments to evaluate the strength of claims. This is not just about deciding whether a claim is true or not, but also whether a conclusion can be logically supported by the available data through an understanding of how arguments work.

Critical thinkers make the quality of their thinking an object of study. They are sensitive to the values of inquiry and the quality of inferences drawn from given information.

They are also meta-cognitive - meaning they’re aware of their thought processes (or some of them) such as understanding how and why they arrive at particular conclusions - and have the tools and ability to evaluate and improve their own thinking.

How we can teach it

Many approaches to developing critical thinking are based on Philosophy for Children , a program that involves teaching the methodology of argument and focuses on thinking skills. Other approaches provide this focus outside of a philosophical context.

Read more: How to make good arguments at school (and everywhere else)

Teachers at one Brisbane school, who have extensive training in critical thinking pedagogies, developed a task that asked students to determine Australia’s greatest sports person.

Students needed to construct their own criteria for greatness. To do so, they had to analyse the Australian sporting context, create possible evaluative standards, explain and justify why some standards would be more acceptable than others and apply these to their candidates.

They then needed to argue their case with their peers to develop criteria that were robust, defensible, widely applicable and produced a choice that captured significant and relevant aspects of Australian sport.

Learning experiences and assessment items that facilitate critical thinking skills include those in which students can:

  • challenge assumptions
  • frame problems collectively
  • question creatively
  • construct, analyse and evaluate arguments
  • discerningly apply values of inquiry
  • engage in a wide variety of cognitive skills, including analysing, explaining, justifying and evaluating (which creates possibilities for argument construction and evaluation and for applying the values of inquiry)

One strategy that also has a large impact on students’ ability to analyse and evaluate arguments is argument mapping , in which a student’s reasoning can be visually displayed by capturing the inferential pathway from premises to conclusion. Argument maps are an important tool in making our reasoning available for analysis and evaluation.

kid critical thinking definition

How we know it works

Studies involving a Philosophy for Children approach show children experience cognitive gains , as measured by improved academic outcomes, for several years after having weekly classes for a year compared to their peers.

Read more: Who am I? Why am I here? Why children should be taught philosophy (beyond better test scores)

This type of argument-based intellectual engagement , however, can show high outcomes in terms of the quality of thinking in any classroom.

Research also shows deliberate attention to the practice of reasoning in the context of our everyday lives can be significantly improved through targeted teaching.

Researchers looking at the gains made in a single semester of teaching critical thinking with argument maps said

the critical thinking gains measured […] are close to that which could be expected to result from three years of undergraduate education.

Students who are explicitly taught to think well also do better on subject-based exams and standardised tests than those who do not.

Our yet-to-be-published study, using verified data, showed students in years three to nine who engaged in a series of 12 one-hour teacher-facilitated online lessons in critical thinking, showed a significant increase in relative gains in NAPLAN test results – as measured against a control group and after controlling for other variables.

In terms of developing 21st century skills, which includes setting up students for lifelong learning, teaching critical thinking should be core business.

The University of Queensland Critical Thinking Project has a number of tools to help teach critical thinking skills. One is a web-based mapping system , now in use in a number of schools and universities, to help increase the critical thinking abilities of students.

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Ulrich Boser

How Parents Can Teach Kids Critical Thinking

A research-based guide to help highlight the importance of critical thinking..

Posted February 21, 2020

Recent controversy over the role of social media “ swarms ” in the 2020 election have served as a new reminder — as if we needed one — that public discourse is in bad disrepair. In the last few years have seen countless incidents of people — including many who should know better — weighing in on issues prematurely with little nuance and unhelpful vitriol, being duped by badly biased information or outright fake news , and automatically attributing the worst intentions to their opponents.

Liberal democracies have always relied on flawed sources to inform the public, but not until now have we been confronted with an online medium seemingly designed to play on our biases and emotions; encourage knee-jerk reactions, groupthink , and superficiality; and distract us from deeper thinking.

Better critical thinking skills are needed to help us confront these challenges. Nevertheless, we still don’t have a good handle on what it is and, especially, how best to foster it among children of all ages.

The stakes are now higher than ever.

To address this deficit, Reboot Foundation recently put out a Parents’ Guide to critical thinking. I work for Reboot and helped on the guide that attempts to give parents and other adults the tools and understanding they need to help their kids cope with technological upheaval, acquire the skills they need to navigate an ever more complicated and information-rich world, and overcome the pitfalls of biased and emotional reasoning.

1. Starting Young

As researchers have noted for some time now, critical thinking can’t be cleanly separated from cognitive development more generally. So, although many people still think of critical thinking as something that is appropriate to teach only in college or late high school, parents and educators should actually devote attention to developing critical thinking skills at a young age.

Of course, it’s not necessary or even possible to start teaching 4-year-olds high-level logic . But there’s a lot parents can do to open up their children’s minds to the world around them. The most important thing to foster at this young age is what researchers call metacognition : awareness of one’s own thinking and thought processes.

It’s only with metacognition that children will learn to think more strategically, identify errors in their thinking patterns, and recognize their own limitations and the value of others’ perspectives. Here are some good ways to foster these habits of mind.

  • Encourage kids’ curiosity by asking them lots of questions about why they think what they think. Parents should also not dismiss children’s speculative questions, but encourage them to think those questions through.
  • Encourage active reading by discussing and reflecting on books and asking children to analyze different characters’ thoughts and attitudes. Emphasize and embrace ambiguity.
  • Expose them as much as possible to children from different backgrounds — whether cultural, geographical, or socio-economic. These experiences are invaluable.
  • Bring children into adult conversations , within appropriate limits of course, and don’t just dismiss their contributions. Even if their contributions are unsophisticated or mistaken, engage with children and help them improve.

2. Putting Emotions in Perspective

Just as children need to learn how to step back from their thought processes, they must also learn how to step back from their emotions. As we’ve seen time and again in our public discourse, emotion is often the enemy of thinking. It can lead us to dismiss legitimate evidence; to shortchange perspectives that would otherwise be valuable; and to say and do things we later regret.

When children are young (ages 5 to 9), fostering emotional management should center around learning to take on new challenges and cope with setbacks. It’s important children be encouraged to try new things and not be protected from failure. These can include both intellectual challenges like learning a new language or musical instrument and physical ones like trying out rock-climbing or running a race.

When children fail — as they will — the adults around them should help them see that failing does not make them failures. Quite the opposite: it’s the only way to become successful.

As they get older, during puberty and adolescence , emotional management skills can help them deal better with confusing physical and social changes and maintain focus on their studies and long-term goals . Critical thinking, in this sense, need not — and should not — be dry or academic. It can have a significant impact on children’s and young adults’ emotional lives and their success beyond the classroom .

kid critical thinking definition

3. Learning How to Be Online

Finally, critical thinking development in these challenging times must involve an online component. Good citizenship requires being able to take advantage of the wealth of information the internet offers and knowing how to avoid its many pitfalls.

Parental controls can be useful, especially for younger children, and help them steer clear of inappropriate content. But instilling kids with healthy online habits is ultimately more useful — and durable. Parents should spend time practicing web searches with their kids, teaching them how to evaluate sources and, especially, how to avoid distractions and keep focused on the task at hand.

We’ve all experienced the way the internet can pull us off task and down a rabbit hole of unproductive browsing. These forces can be especially hard for children to resist, and they can have long-term negative effects on their cognitive development.

As they get older, children should learn more robust online research skills , especially in how to identify different types of deceptive information and misinformation . Familiarizing themselves with various fact-checking sites and methods can be especially useful. A recent Reboot study found that schools are still not doing nearly enough to teach media literacy to students.

As kids routinely conduct more and more of their social lives online it’s also vital that they learn to differentiate between the overheated discourse on social media and genuine debate.

The barriers to critical thinking are not insurmountable. But if our public discourse is to come through the current upheaval intact, children, beginning at a young age, must learn the skills to navigate their world thoughtfully and critically.

Ulrich Boser

Ulrich Boser is the founder of The Learning Agency and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress. He is the author of Learn Better, which Amazon called “the best science book of the year.”

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10 Tips for Teaching Kids To Be Awesome Critical Thinkers

Help students dig deeper!

"Critical thinking" written on sticky notes

For more tips, check out Mentoring Minds’  Critical Thinking Strategies Guide —a flip chart packed with question stems and lesson ideas to help teach kids to become better critical and creative thinkers. 

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Getting students to dig deeper and answer questions using higher-level thinking can be a challenge. Here are our favorite tips for teaching critical thinking skills, adapted from Mentoring Minds’ Critical Thinking Strategies Guide,  that help kids solve problems by going beyond the obvious response.

1. Slow down the pace.

It’s easy to fall into a routine of calling on one of the first kids who raises a hand. But if you wait even just 3 to 5 seconds after asking a question, you’ll probably find the pool of students willing to give an answer grows significantly. Plus, it helps the speedy kids learn that the first answer that pops into their head isn’t always the best. There are times you may even want to wait up to a minute or longer if the question is particularly complex or time-consuming. To avoid an awkward pause, you can let kids know that they have 10 seconds to think before answering the question or that you need to see 10 hands raised from volunteers before you hear a response.

Turtle Beating Rabbit in Race

2. Pose a Question of the Day.

Put a new spin on bell ringers by asking a Question of the Day. Use a questioning stem (e.g., create a riddle that uses the mathematics term “multiply” in one of the clues or write a letter to a classmate recommending this book) and put it on the board. Students can write answers in their critical-thinking journals. Then have a class discussion at the end of the day.

3. Make a response box.

Write a random critical-thinking question on the board, (e.g., Is there a better way to work out this problem? Explain your thinking.). Give students a specified amount of time to provide a written response and put it in the response box. Pull out entries one by one and read them aloud to the class. Alternatively, you can give a prize—like a homework pass or free time—to the student with the first appropriate response whose name is drawn from the box or to everyone who submitted appropriate answers.

4. Take a side.

First, read a statement that has two opposing views (e.g., Do you agree or disagree with the author? Why?). Ask kids who agree to stand on one side of the room and those who disagree to stand on the other side. Then have kids talk about why they chose each side. They can switch sides if they change their minds during the discussion.

Yes and No Street Signs

5. Ask “why?” five times.

When you encounter a problem in class, you can help the class come up with a solution by using the Why? Five Times strategy. Ask the first why question (e.g., Why didn’t the class do well on the spelling test?), and after a response is given, ask why four more times (e.g., Why didn’t students study for the test?, Why didn’t students have time to study for the test?, etc.). The idea is that after the fifth question is asked, the problem will be solved.

6. Role-play.

Come up with an imaginary scenario and have kids work through the steps to solve a problem as a class. First, identify the problem and write it as a question (e.g., Why didn’t the science experiment work as planned?). Then brainstorm ideas to solve it and choose the best one to write as a solution statement. Finally, create an action plan to carry out the solution.

7. Go “hitchhiking.”

Practice creative thinking by collaborating on a storyboard. Write a problem on an index card and pin it on the top of a bulletin board. Then put different headings on index cards and pin them below the main card. Have kids brainstorm ideas that develop each of the heading cards and let kids pin them on the board. Encourage kids to “go hitchhiking” by building onto their classmates’ ideas.

Hitchhiker

8. Turn around.

A great way to focus on the positive in not-so-positive situations is the Turn Around thinking strategy. If a student forgets to bring his homework to school, you can ask, “What good can come of this?” The student can answer with ideas like, “I will change my routine before I go to bed.”

9. Put your pocket chart to good use.

Choose six completed questioning stems from different levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy and put them in a pocket chart. Choose some strips as mandatory and let kids pick two from the higher levels to answer aloud or in a journal.

10. Hold a Q&A session.

One way you can figure out how well kids are grasping critical-thinking skills is by holding question-and-answer sessions. Ask a variety of questions one-on-one or in small groups and take note of the levels of thought individual students use regularly and avoid over time. You can review your notes to help build more higher-order-thinking questions into your lessons.

FREE E-BOOK! How to Build a 36-Week Character Education Program . S upport  social-emotional learning through a critical thinking lens with  36 projects and activities plus tips, research, and more!

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Examples of critical thinking skills like correlation tick-tac-Toe, which teaches analysis skills and debates which teach evaluation skills.

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7 Tips for Cultivating Critical Thinking for Kids Throughout the School Year

Jan. 24, 2021

In the world of education, the phrase “critical thinking skills” is used so widely, that most of us don’t stop to truly contemplate about what it means for our early learners. Over the years, many educational buzzwords have come and gone, but now more than ever before are teachers and researchers realizing the true importance of planting the seeds for critical analysis. 

Most of us already know that our little learners are notoriously concrete learners, which is to say that they tend to think literally about ideas and concepts. Any teacher could tell you that students don’t actually develop the ability to think critically in an authentic way until well into adolescence. So naturally, you might be wondering just how we can go about teaching critical thinking skills to children. 

a boy in the classroom raising his hand

That’s why it’s important to know that critical thinking isn’t just about possessing the skills or ability to be able to do it; instead, teachers and parents must form the foundations for such analysis by cultivating a mindset in which kids are able to develop throughout their elementary and middle school years. As a result, the goal is for students to use such skills effectively as they approach complex topics and ideas in high school. 

Before exploring strategies parents and teachers can use to foster critical thinking for kids, it’s important to understand exactly what analytical thinking entails and how it helps kids grow into successful adults. 

Why Critical Thinking Matters? 

Simply put, it is the ability to think clearly and rationally about a complex topic or idea and analyze it in a way that helps us solve problems. Deep analysis over a topic or problem is key to success in college and in our careers, as it helps our society move forward with solutions to our everyday problems. Without it, doctors and researchers wouldn’t be able to create different therapies for common ailments, and law enforcement agencies wouldn’t be able to solve crimes. In all walks of life, critical thinking is essential to our lives. 

To think critically, kids must have key content knowledge to set the stage for deep analytical thinking! Try our all-in-one learning app to hone academic skills. Try it for free today!

For elementary students who aren’t yet developmentally able to think deeply as adults, developing these skills mean that parents and teachers must plant the seeds to form a foundation on which kids can grow their ability to do so. This means that we must encourage a critical thinking mindset, which goes beyond just having the skills themselves; fostering an attitude or frame of mind that allows children to learn to think analytically is what teachers and parents should really strive for. As adults guide elementary school children towards deep thought, they should notice the attributes listed below of a budding critical thinker. 

Start Learning 

What Does a Critical Thinker Look or Act Like? 

To continue with the above metaphor, once teachers plant the seeds for critical thinking, how do they know of those seeds start to sprout? Pay attention to the following attributes that show a student moving from concrete to critical thinking: 

  • They approach learning situations with an open mind
  • They understand that there might be more than one right (or wrong) answer
  • They look for evidence to support their ideas
  • They ask questions based upon evidence

father and son

If you found the list above eye-opening, don’t worry! Kindergarteners certainly do not step foot in the classroom already armed with the above qualities. At this point, you might be wondering how children can reach such a level where they exhibit the mindset above. Let’s take a look at strategies to help move kids from literal to analytical! 

7 Tips for Cultivating a Positive Critical Thinking Mindset

Whether you’re a teacher or a parent, you might be curious what you can do to support your kids in their learning journey. Try the following strategies to unleash your child’s inner analytical thinking skills: 

Ask open-ended questions 

Think about the last time you read a book with your kids. Chances are, you might have asked a few comprehension questions. But were those questions yes or no questions? Did they necessitate more than a one-worded response? Any question that can be answered using one word is a close-ended question. 

Because a student can easily answer them with simple recalled facts, these types of questions are unhelpful when it comes to fostering critical thinking. Instead, ask questions that allows children to think about a response and provide a full sentence (or more!) response. Don’t forget to allow students enough time to process information, so be patient while waiting for a response. If they get stuck, give them a small hint to guide them down the right path. 

Set the stage for effective critical thinking by reinforcing key academic knowledge in a fun and engaging way! Check out our Talented and Gifted app to find quality learning games, lessons, worksheets and more, free for 30 days!    

Create an atmosphere where kids aren’t afraid to be wrong.

Teaching critical thinking in schools is important, but it isn’t affective if students are afraid to raise their hand and join in the discussion or answer the question! Oftentimes, kids are reluctant to speak in class because they’re afraid of how they will be judged by their peers if they answer incorrectly. Instead, to foster critical thinking skills, create a classroom (or family) environment where they can feel free to think deeply without the fear of being laughed at.

To do this, stress to children that it’s okay to be wrong sometimes, and that we learn the most when we learn through our mistakes. Create a strong rapport with children to ensure that they know that you care about them as a person, so they will be willing to take risks, think deeply, and volunteer ideas and answers, even if they might be wrong. 

Connect different ideas and examine relationships between them

During class or family discussions, games, or activities, it’s important to connect different ideas together to see the relationships that exist between them. For instance, if a child is volunteering at a soup kitchen for homeless people, they might eventually wonder how people end up in that position where they need such public assistance. This would be the perfect time to connect different ideas in an age-appropriate way, like poverty, racial inequality, or family issues. Talking about these subjects would help connect certain issues, like poverty, to homelessness, showing the relationship between them. 

Kick off a conversation with your little learner after watching a video. Explore topics your kid is curious about and discuss them in a fun and engaging manner! Check the video below to get your conversation rolling:

Examine different points of view

Oftentimes children will believe that there is only one “right” way of thinking, when in fact everyone is different and has the right to have varying opinions on complex topics. When faced with a subject like social studies, it’s important to encourage kids to seek out and try to understand topics from others’ point of view. This not only will help kids learn to think critically, it will also make them more compassionate and empathetic towards others. 

Inspire imagination and creativity 

It’s hard to think critically about any topic that’s boring for kids! Children are known for their vast imaginations, and it’s important to use it to their full advantage! To do this, think about project-based learning, or allowing kids to have a choice about what topics they explore in preschool learning worksheets within the wider curriculum. As a teacher, write (guided) student choice into your lesson plans for a particular activity or project. As a parent, explore ideas your child is interested in through science experiments, art projects, etc. 

Collaboration: work with a friend!

As it is often said, two brains are better than one! Working collaboratively with other peers help children consider viewpoints or thoughts that maybe they themselves wouldn’t think of naturally on their own. If you’re a teacher, plan in group work to allow students the opportunity to bounce ideas of their classmates. As a parent, it’s important to find a way your child can work with other children. Organize a play and study group if you have an only child, or if your kids are not similar in age. Otherwise, let kids work together with siblings or cousins as they tackle science experiments or play-based learning.

Use evidence to create questions

One of the best ways to tell if kids are developing the skills they need to become critical thinkers is to observe their reactions to lessons, or projects. As they look at evidence to drive their conclusions, are they actively asking questions of their own? If so, are these questions relevant to what they’ve observed or learned, or are they more randomized? Guide children to create their own questions based upon what they learn to further help them think more deeply. Over time, children will learn how to use their own questioning to propel their learning to greater heights, coming to conclusions that they wouldn’t otherwise have created without their analytical thinking skills! 

Teaching critical thinking skills to children might at first seem like an impossible task considering the developmental capabilities of children as our kids tend to think on a more literal level. However, students don’t suddenly develop analytical thinking skills overnight, and the process must be taught and reinforced throughout a child’s education! Use the tips above to get kids in acritical thinking mindset to prepare them for high school, college, and beyond! 

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Why Is Developing Critical Thinking Skills Important for Kids?

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What does it mean to think critically? In psychology, there’s little agreement over the meaning of critical thinking, even though everyone agrees that critical thinking skills are vital for academic performance and career development. But, should teaching critical thinking for kids be a central learning objective?  

Keep reading to find out, as this is the question we’ll focus on today. First, we’ll take a brief overview of critical thinking as a cognitive phenomenon and choose a definition, so we both have a clearer understanding of the process when we discuss it further. Then, we’ll take a deep dive into the scientific evidence that’s been piling up. Finally, based on that evidence, we’ll talk about the benefits of teaching critical thinking skills to kids.

A Brief Overview

Before we can argue that teaching critical thinking to kids is important, we need to make sure we’re on the same page concerning what critical thinking is, what are the underlying processes shaping critical thinking skills, and how critical thinking develops. 

What Is Critical Thinking?

Critical thinking is a cognitive process that we use to analyze information from our environment with reflective skepticism when deciding what to believe. In other words, critical thinking is a mental activity that allows us to examine the things presented to us in a unique way, so we can take the best course of action. 

To illustrate this, let’s think of a practical example. In the classroom, kids are required to learn by reading the educational material on a specific topic. Promoting critical thinking would be to examine the material with the goal of deciding whether it’s reliable, informative, biased vs. objective, and figuring out what are the author’s motives. The following questions reflect critical thinking: 

  • Who is the author and why did they write this piece of information? 

For example, they have professionally studied the topic for years.

  • What is the message that they want to share?

For example, the author believes XX, has convincing arguments, and wants to share them with the world.

  • How does this piece of information fit with everything else I know on this topic?

For example, this explains/contradicts the claims we’ve read last time.

  • Do I need additional information on this topic before I can reach a conclusion?

For example, the author didn’t explain how XX develops, and I need to read more about that before accepting/rejecting their arguments.

  • Should I trust this information? Why/Why not?

For example, the author didn’t include any references to support the claims (facts) on which they’ve based their arguments. Can I be sure they’re not lying?

  •   What did I learn from this piece of information?

For example, I’ve learned arguments supporting the topic, but I still need to see other points of view or see what critics say.

  • What are my next steps?

For example, read another text on this topic from another point of view.  

What Are Critical Thinking Skills? 

In the last paragraph, we’ve talked about critical thinking as if it’s one unit or process within our cognition. However, the truth is that complex processes, such as critical thinking, are better viewed as a collection or function of many different more basic mental processes, such as attention, logic, memory, etc. 

Unfortunately, when it comes to the mechanism underlying critical thinking, the disagreement among experts is just as strong as with its definition. Different authors identify different skills which they believe are vital for critical thinking. Of course, there’s overlap, and we’ll take a look at the skills and mechanisms which are accepted by most professionals. 

According to Kompf & Bond (2001) , critical thinking involves rationality, reasoning, logic, previous knowledge, metacognition, intelligence, decision making, problem-solving, and a moral component (reflective thinking). 

Rationality and logic are two mechanisms frequently mentioned in other literature, too. This is because for most authors critical thinking is considered to be logically correct thinking . In other words, this would mean that kids who think critically can distinguish between logically true and logically false claims. In practice, critical thinking can be promoted by developing logical reasoning skills such as deduction, induction, and abduction .

However, some authors, such as Kerry S. Walters, argue that logical reasoning is necessary but not sufficient for rationality. Therefore, imagination, conceptual creativity, and intuition are also included in rationality, which might be important to keep in mind, when we discuss the benefits of teaching critical thinking for kids. 

To conclude, the following skills are considered to be part of critical thinking by most experts:

  • Comprehension (decode meaning)
  • Analysis (identify arguments)
  • Inference (draw logically valid conclusions)
  • Evaluation (assess the credibility/quality of claims)
  • Explanation (present arguments for own conclusions)
  • Self-regulation  (self-monitor and self-correct)

How to Develop Critical Thinking?

We’ve already touched upon this topic when we mentioned the practical skills involved in critical thinking. There are a lot of elements that children need to master first, such as logical thinking, mental visualization, deduction, and induction. Then, they need to learn how to use these elements to find patterns, make decisions, and think in a unique way. 

Safe to say, teaching critical thinking skills is a challenge that requires patience and a lot of practical experience. For these reasons, we don’t believe we can do justice to such a complex question in one paragraph, especially considering how important it’s for teachers and homeschooling parents to know where to start and how to make progress. However, we can discuss the development of critical thinking for kids in a separate article, which is exactly what we did! 

If you want to know how to develop critical thinking through practical examples and exercises, check out our article “ 11 Ways to Help Your Child Develop Critical Thinking Skills. ”

And, in the meantime, let’s see why critical thinking is so important for kids!

Why Is Critical Thinking Important for Kids?

We can easily argue that critical thinking is one of the most important elements of literacy! Once children have developed critical thinking they’ll be able to make reasonable judgments, identify problems, come up with solutions, and filter reliable information necessary for independent learning. 

Another way to think about critical thinking is through the concept of digital literacy. Kids receive most of the information online where we can’t control who posts and what. This becomes a problem when we take into consideration that not everyone is qualified to speak or write on a specific topic, or they deliberately spread false information. Critical thinking for kids is a defense mechanism that shields them from becoming victims to such dangers. 

There are many other theoretical considerations and practical examples that illustrate the importance of critical thinking for kids. Let’s go over the most important ones.

What Can Scientific Findings Tell Us?

If we want to make a serious case about the importance of critical skills, we have to go beyond the theories and some teachers’ experiences and take a look at the science. What can we learn from psychological and pedagogical research findings? 

Murawski published a study in the Journal of Learning in Higher Education in 2014 , where she discussed critical thinking in the classroom. According to her, educators who teach students critical thinking skills, give control to students to take over their learning process. In other words, children will then approach the course in a more effective manner, ask more challenging questions, and participate in the learning process more intensely.

However, as Carroll from the University of New Orleans cleverly remarks in his study , even though all teachers agree that basic knowledge and skills are not enough to define student achievement and critical thinking is more than necessary, assessments in almost all of the classrooms included in the study focused on basic knowledge and skills measured through multiple-choice questions. This brings up the issue of how much critical thinking is developed in schools and what are the effects of such variability. 

Ernst & Monroe’s study from 2007, published in the Environmental Education Research Journal , might shed some light on these issues. The authors investigated how environment-based curriculums (EBL) influence the development of critical thinking skills and a disposition toward critical thinking. The results show that, indeed, environment-based learning had a positive effect (improved) on students’ critical thinking skills. 

On the other hand, some evidence from a study in 2001, published in Instructional Science , shows that peer interaction is not effective for improving critical thinking skills. Unfortunately, this further illustrates the fact that critical thinking skills are incredibly complex and many teaching programs might get unsatisfactory results because they use non-effective methods. 

Another interesting take on critical thinking gives Loes et al. in their 2016 study which investigates the relationship between diverse experiences and critical thinking. The authors argue that students will be more likely to engage in effortful and complex modes of thought when they encounter new and unique situations. 

We also have evidence that argument maps improve critical thinking, which in turn make better learners out of students. More specifically, Rider and Thomason (2014 ) investigated the claims and gave support to the claims that students learn to better understand and critique arguments, improve in their reading and writing, and become clearer in their thinking through argument mapping (a method improving critical thinking). 

Finally, another study by Abduljaleel Alwali closely examined the benefits of critical thinking in high school and concluded that critical thinking positively impacts perception, individuality, general analytical skills, academic performance, metacognition, practical applications of theoretical knowledge, and decision-making. 

What do these studies tell us about the importance of critical thinking for kids in general? Keep reading, because everything that we’ve learned from these studies will be summarized and explained in greater detail in our next paragraph.

Benefits of Teaching Critical Thinking for Kids

By now, we’ve seen that there are many findings supporting some, if not all of the benefits associated with critical thinking. While we still need a lot more research to be done before we can completely demystify the neurological basis of critical thinking, it is more than clear that this is an incredibly important cognitive process that could literally change students’ lives. Here’s how!

Critical Thinking Promotes Creative Problem-Solving Skills

In some of the studies, we’ve seen that teachers do not believe that students’ achievements are mirrored only in the knowledge of facts or basic skills. All educators agree there’s more to education, including creativity and learning how to think. Well, teaching critical thinking is one way to go beyond factual knowledge, stimulate creativity, and allow students to look for innovative solutions to common problems. 

Critical Thinking Creates Independence

Another science-backed benefit of critical thinking is control and independence. In other words, students who are curious and are not afraid to question the information they get, usually take initiative and go on their own to find answers. This means that they think more deeply about the topic, want to know more details, and hear other opinions before making conclusions. All of this makes them more independent, as they’ll seek information beyond what’s given to them by the teacher, which is the first step toward independent learning. 

Critical Thinking Promotes Curiosity

The basis of continuous independent learning is curiosity. For a child to learn on their own, they need to be internally motivated, which is always associated with curiosity, one way or another. Moreover, the nature of critical thinking means to evaluate information by questioning aspects of it and relating it with previous knowledge. This is a very intense mental process that requires intentionality. If kids are not curious or internally motivated, chances are they won’t think too deeply about the issue. Teaching critical thinking is one way to make kids more curious about knowledge in general. 

Critical Thinking Stimulates Metacognition

Metacognition is a cognitive process that refers to one’s ability to think about thinking. It sounds a little weird, but it’s very simple. Because we have metacognition we’re aware of our own mental processes. We know whether we understand something and how we perform based on self-monitoring. It’s also the ability to see ourselves as thinkers or learners. How is it associated with critical thinking? Well, questioning and challenging information are only possible under the assumption that we are aware of how these pieces of information relate to our previous knowledge. It also entails questioning ourselves and finding new relations between the things we’ve learned before. This is why thinking critically means to use and practice metacognition. 

Critical Thinking Creates Resilience

Finally, one of the most important practical applications of critical thinking skills is improved literacy, which makes kids more resilient to manipulation, brainwashing, false information, and other dangers that lurk on the internet and in-person in the form of peer pressure, bullying, and more. Kids will have the ability to better analyse the situation and ultimately make better decisions. 

More generally, if we think of resilience as an ability to solve and overcome problems, then we can also argue that since critical thinking improves problem-solving skills, it acts as a protective factor for students in both educational and social contexts.

Before You Go

Critical thinking for kids is a truly essential topic that deserves more attention. As we’ve seen, critical thinking is associated with many other cognitive skills important for academic success, but also life in general. If educators dedicate more time for developing critical thinking skills, they can help students become more engaged in the learning process, independent, and efficient problem-solvers.

In case you’re wondering how you can achieve that in your classroom, let us remind you to check out our article on developing critical thinking skills among children. There, we’ve shared many different practical examples and exercises you can easily incorporate in the classroom. 

Furthermore, visit our main website and browse through our large collection of worksheet packs . Most of our resources are interactive and promote critical thinking skills in children through the exercises included in each topic.

Plus, make sure to follow our blog by subscribing to our newsletter . We regularly share insightful guides that break down complex topics, such as critical thinking for kids, in a clear and easy to read tone. This way, you can stay up to date with all the new trends and teaching practices in education, without losing yourself in the sea of information online. 

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kid critical thinking definition

Parents' Guide

Developing critical thinking in teens, introduction.

For children aged 13 and older, the development of critical thinking continues to build from the skills acquired and the challenges faced in the first two developmental stages. These skills must continue to be reinforced as the child matures.  

kid critical thinking definition

The four basic aspects of critical thinking we examined in the first part of this guide, concerning children aged five to nine , remain relevant, therefore. To review, these were:

Critical thinking based on arguing a point.

Developing self-esteem, the foundation of critical thinking.

Emotional management, a prerequisite for critical thinking.

The social norm of critical thinking.

We also saw new elements come into play between ages 10 and 12 in the acquisition of critical thinking and reasoning skills. These are likewise still important in considering the development of critical thinking in young teenagers:

The development of reasoning skills beyond argument.

Puberty and its implications in terms of interests, self-esteem, and emotional management.

The digital world, via gaming, the internet, and a burgeoning social or pseudo-social life (on social media targeted at young people).

To these concerns are added new set of factors come into play in later adolescence as the cognitive system matures and social life changes. These factors will hugely increase the critical potential of 13 to 15 year olds, while at the same time limiting it in certain respects. These factors are:

The development of formal logic, allowing for more and more complex and abstract lines of reasoning.

New social pressures, including heightened peer pressure and anxieties over social integration. The influences of groups and gangs, which tend to critique the established social order, can also lead to a conformity in attitudes and ways of thinking within the group.

Critical analysis of sources of information and the strengthening of interpretive skills.

Critical thinking in group projects, and as an element of citizenship and social progress .

Beginning at age 13, adolescents can begin to acquire and apply formal logical rules and processes. The rudimentary logic learned at previous stages can now be refined by teaching adolescents some more advanced logical notation and vocabulary, which are outlined in the coming sections. It is important to keep in mind, again, that critical thinking extends far beyond logic, offering tools to apply more broadly to arguments and information encountered in the everyday world.

In the teenage years, social pressures accelerate, and with the internet and social media, these pressures move faster and with more force than ever. As outlined in section two below, critical thinking can prove a valuable resource for teenagers to help cope with these pressures and resist the groupthink that easily emerges in social cliques both online and offline. Critical thinking can also play a role in helping young adults choose and pursue emerging goals, by constructing long-term plans and methods. Finally, critical thinking is an indispensable tool in helping young people understand and analyze the wealth of information sources now bombarding them.

1. Formal Logic

At the age of 13 and older, children can begin to learn the rules of formal logic and further hone their critical thinking skills. whether or not their children are learning these skills in school, parents can help by discussing how to analyze concepts and arguments..

From ages 11 to 12, there gradually develops what Piaget called the formal operational stage . New capabilities at this stage, like deductive (if-then) reasoning and establishing abstract relationships, are generally mastered around ages 15 to 16.

As we saw, by the end of this stage, teenagers, like adults, can use both formal and abstract logic—but only if they have learned the language of logic (“if,” “then,” “therefore,” etc.) and have repeatedly put it to use. Under these circumstances, children learn to extrapolate and make generalizations based on real-life situations. 

kid critical thinking definition

Thus, from ages 10 to 12, by stimulating children intellectually—urging them to reflect and establish lines of reasoning—they gradually become able to move beyond a situational logic based on action and observation onto a logic based on rules of deduction independent of the situation at hand.

This ability to manipulate abstract symbols consolidates by around age 15, provided that one has been versed in formal logic.

A and B are two logical propositions, such that A is the opposite of B. From this, we may formally deduce (without reference to  anything concrete) that the proposition P, which states “A or B,” is always true. There are no alternatives, so P fulfills all possibilities. We may also deduce that the proposition P 1 , “A and B,” is always false.  Here, two contradictory propositions cannot both be true. If one is true, the other is false.

These formal operations require both a mature central nervous system and a mature cognitive system. But, since such examples of formal reasoning are detached from everyday life, they require deliberate practice. Even an adult who is out of practice can struggle with formal reasoning.

After working through several examples, parents can help children extract the logical rules behind those examples.

kid critical thinking definition

We can present these two rules of logic using more concrete examples, which makes formal reasoning at once more accessible and less intimidating. In concrete form, however, the reasoning will be less easily applied to new situations. 

If proposition A is: “this salmon is farmed,” proposition B (the opposite of A) will be: “this salmon is not farmed.” B could also be expressed  as: “this salmon is wild.” It is easy in this concrete context to see that P, “A or B,” is always true. A salmon must either be farmed or wild. It is also easy to conceive that P 1 , “A and B,” is always false because a salmon cannot be both farmed and wild.

Moving away from situational lines of reasoning allows teens to extrapolate and apply logic to the ever more complex challenges and life events they might encounter as they mature into their young adult years. Without formal logic, young teens and young adults won’t be able to define their formal reasoning abilities to extend past situational deductions and personal life experiences or form larger connections with their surroundings and the human experiences that occur around them everyday.

Once they learn to abstract from concrete examples and express these rules in formal logic, children can form and manipulate logical notation and apply it to a multitude of situations. 

kid critical thinking definition

How can we help children from age 13 and older improve their formal logical deduction skills?

We must start by working on these two rules through concrete examples like that of the salmon. After working through several examples, parents can help children extract the logical rules behind those examples. This is the inductive phase: from concrete examples, we extract the common features and express them in a formal rule. 

Next, it will be necessary to prove this rule solely by logical deduction. If we do not do this, we cannot be certain that the rule is valid in every context. Extracting the common features only results in rules which, at this stage, remain merely hypothetical. Only reasoning allows for the generalization of a rule.

Once students have mastered a collection of formal rules, they can be trained to recognize, within a problem or a given context, what rule is applicable. That is, they can take an initial claim (a hypothesis), apply a rule of deduction to it, and arrive at a conclusion.

2. Faulty Reasoning

One important way teenagers can improve their logic and reasoning skills is by using formal definitions. these are necessary for more precise and universal reasoning and can help children identify faulty reasoning., integrating these topic into family discussions can be enormously productive., extension vs. intension.

One idea in formal logic that can be valuable to learn at this age has to do with how concepts are defined. For very young children, categories or concepts are defined according to how they are encountered in everyday life. For example, the general concept of color is determined by all the examples of colors children have come across or imagined. The concept covers all these different experiences. This is called the concept’s “ extension .”

But it is important that children from the age of around 13 start to learn to define concepts not merely according to their extension, but in a formal, scientific manner.

For example, instead of using a definition drawn from experience, students can explain that a color is a perception that our eye, linked to the brain, produces when an electromagnetic wave of a given frequency hits our retina. This definition according to the formal, internal qualities of the concept is called the concept’s “intension.” 

Definition by intension is more complicated, but it allows for the use of the concept in formal reasoning. Therefore, definition by intension gears the child’s mind towards higher-level abstract reasoning. 

For example, if we have to determine whether or not a given entity is a color or not, the intensional definition will offer us formal criteria for making a judgment.

Here’s another example. The prime numbers can be defined formally by intension: they are “the numbers that are only divisible by themselves and one.” If we were to learn only the extension of the term “prime number,” on the other hand, we would only have a list of the numbers that we know are prime.

It is clear that if we only have this definition by extension and we encounter a new, very large number — higher than the largest number on the list we’ve learned—we will have no criteria for knowing whether it’s prime. But if we have the formal definition by intension, we will, with the help of a calculator, be able to determine whether it is only divisible by one and itself and, therefore, prime.

We can’t productively critique the arguments of others if we don’t share their definitions of concepts.

When we are young, we learn about the world through definitions by extension during the course of our interactions with objects and other people. Our brain defines concepts by extension and then extracts the common features to produce a working definition. 

But these definitions are subjective since they depend on our history of encounters with relevant examples. Thus, all of the concepts we have created do not match other people’s concepts precisely, despite being identically named. They depend on the particular experiences we have had.

kid critical thinking definition

Yet, towards the ages of 13 to 15, with mathematical and formal logic, it becomes possible to define concepts by intension and, therefore, to share objective meaning with others. Teenagers can enter a world  of shared and precise meanings. This is a prerequisite for the application of precise and formal critical thinking. We can’t productively critique the arguments of others if we don’t share their definitions of concepts.

The formal approach for children aged 13 and up should, then be twofold: formalize the definition of the concepts used and formalize the logical deduction itself. This comes with practice and enhances both children’s capacity to communicate and their critical faculties.

The Concepts of Intension and Extension​

Recognizing faulty reasoning.

As has been discussed in previous sections, developing critical reasoning requires more than simply knowing how to reason formally and contextually. It is also necessary to learn how to recognize flaws in the reasoning of other people who may wish to convince us of their way of thinking, either for narcissistic reasons or to lead us to act to their own advantage.

Such flaws can occur on several levels:

Erroneous rules of logic, leading to false reasoning based on reliable hypotheses.

False hypotheses (starting points for reasoning): even if the reasoning is valid, the conclusion may be false. Certain politicians use this strategy very frequently.

Using a formal rule in a situation to which it does not apply. This often occurs in over-simplified mathematical modeling of complex material, for example when an essay in the humanities is interpreted using only the tools of formal logic. 

These three types of flaws can be worked into family discussions, with the goal of training children to counter weak or manipulative lines of argument. School should not be too heavily relied upon to provide this kind of practice for your children. Already between the ages of 13 and 15, they are able to construct brilliant lines of reasoning, which will prevent them from being tricked by manipulative or intellectually limited people.

Flawed Reasoning​

3. individuation, teenagers have a natural impulse to try to separate themselves from their parents and their backgrounds. a good critical thinking foundation can help ease the transition toward individuality and adulthood. better reasoning can help teenagers cope with their emerging independence and avoid an unthinking rejection of their background., what is individuation.

Individuating and the stages of individuation are concepts developed by renowned analytical psychologist Carl Jung . Jung founded analytic psychology and the concepts of extraverted and introverted personalities, archetypes, and the collective unconscious were also developed by Jung along with the theory of individuation.

In adolescence,  the individuation process heralds the initial stages that a child takes toward  becoming a unique individual, something more than just your parents’ offspring, is a psychological necessity. 

Part of differentiating yourself from the world around you is developing a self-image. It is the only way to avoid fading completely into your surroundings—and ending up in utter conformity, or worse.

kid critical thinking definition

Individuation adolescence

Individuation is indispensable to society. In order to sustain itself, society needs diversity. Cultures lacking the social norm of individuation are more fragile. They produce citizens who have identical self-images and behavioral patterns, whereas adapting to change requires diversity, creativity, evolution, and, therefore, critical thinking.

Only very rarely (or not at all) have individuals in these cultures of weak individuation experienced the feelings of crisis and malaise we associate with adolescence. The transition from childhood to adulthood unfolds instead according to so-called “rites of passage.” 

Our civilization has undergone a long and profound evolution through philosophy, science, psychoanalysis, and politics, leading us to a social norm that rejects the idea that the individual in the family, the social group, or the nation, is like a mere cell in an organ. Indeed, everyone has the right and even the “duty” to be reborn by deviating from their origins. 

This is an immense challenge because this act of individuation, this self-creation, arises at a moment when children are not yet able to achieve this “rebirth” autonomously, as they enter an unknown world without even knowing what it will be like. We call this period “adolescence” or even “kidulthood” when it lasts a long time—a growing phenomenon.

Experiencing society predominantly through school or family simultaneously generates pressure to conform and to individualize. It comes as no surprise that this causes some problems.

The desire to be free and independent generates psychological conflict.

What is the process of individuation.

Children have not fully matured intellectually or cognitively when they are confronted with this contradiction. They are, therefore, unable to conceptualize it. This is why, in their behavior and attitudes, children can sometimes bear a closer resemblance to skittish animals than calm self-creators responsible for their own gradual reinvention.

Although unaware of it, children embark upon adolescence through “second-degree” conformity through culture, since adolescence is a societal construct rather than a psycho-behavioral component of puberty. 

Paradoxically, children aged 13 to 15 or older may not experience teenage angst at all, thanks to their critical faculties. In fact, if they feel that their life is fulfilling and stable, they will be able to avoid getting sucked into an alternative world by other children their age. Their youth may pass without them having experienced teen crisis. Instead, they construct their identity reflectively and without drama.  

This, of course, is not typical. The desire to be free and independent generates psychological conflict. The fear and the anxiety associated with this moment of struggle incites rationalizations, thoughts which retrospectively come to explain dissatisfaction, malaise, and rebellion. Every situation that is not comfortable or does not come off successfully, we tend to attribute to our external environment and other people. Consequently, if things are not going well for us—if we are not happy—we tend to blame it on an unjust world.

Parents of teenagers are very familiar with the result: sweeping criticism of everything teens encounter. To the teenager, everyone sucks: parents, teachers, politicians, journalists, and so on. This reaction can generate conflict, but, as is explained in the next section, it also presents a good opportunity for deepening critical faculties.

kid critical thinking definition

4. Teenage Negativity

The need to become an individual can often manifest itself in negative and unyielding attitudes. though teenagers’ criticisms and complaints can be unsophisticated, parents should still engage with them. critical reasoning can help make the process of becoming an individual less painful and more productive..

It can be difficult to know how to react to teenagers’ negativity. On the one hand, their attitudes may seem too extreme and unsophisticated to take seriously. On the other, they can be exasperating and even hurtful when directed against the parents themselves. But parents should do their best to avoid being either dismissive or defensive. 

kid critical thinking definition

The teenager’s emotional negativity is an extreme version of something we are all prone to indulge in from time to time, no matter how highly we may prize our calmness and understanding. Parents should remind themselves that this negativity is part of a bid to become a fully-fledged autonomous individual with an opinion deserving of recognition and respect. 

Parents can help them reach this goal by taking their teens’ complaints seriously. This doesn’t mean telling them they’re right when they aren’t, but treating them as conversation partners worthy of engagement. Parents can ask their children to substantiate and defend their claims using argument and evidence; challenge their children when they fail to argue well; and compliment them when make good points.

This can be a good opportunity for parents themselves to refresh their ability to put aside emotions and handle a topic fairly and dispassionately. By modeling these kinds of intellectual virtues parents make it more likely that their children will adopt them.

Arguing with teenagers can be fun, especially if they begin to experience the kind of satisfaction that comes out of reasoned debate over complicated issues.

Of course these arguments will not always go smoothly, but over time parents can help bring their children into the critical community. Arguing with teenagers can be fun, especially if they begin to experience the kind of satisfaction that comes out of reasoned debate over complicated issues.

The quest for individuality also manifests itself in a need to create or to win over a new group, a group that can become one’s ideal family. The phenomenon of teenage cliques or gangs—and even radical organizations—arises from this fact. Not being understood or accepted is stifling. We need an escape valve, and so, as social animals, we create or join a group that meets our needs.

Individuation and Belonging

5. sense of belonging in a community, although they may relentlessly criticize society, in so doing teenagers are really showing that they belong to it. parents should help teenagers learn to articulate their dissatisfaction and develop a sense of belonging. . critical thinking can help them reconcile their desire for independence with the value of tradition and belonging to society., what it means to belong.

Belonging means acceptance into a larger whole, society, community, or organization. It’s a fairly common experience that occurs at many levels of life from the familial unit, to work, to school, to the society as a whole.

From the age of 12 to 13, in order for children to be able to articulate their disagreements with the status quo, they must develop their critical reasoning skills. As adults, we must, again, engage with these critiques if they are well-founded. This shows children that rejecting their endeavors is not the automatic response. This makes them feel valued and capable of exercising autonomous thought which can, moreover, influence adults.

In this way, critical thinking also — perhaps unexpectedly — makes it easier for children to accept at least a part of the cultural heritage that is offered to or imposed on them by language, upbringing, and custom. 

Allowing a teenager to convince others through argument and logical inference makes them feel more able to become an individual without breaking away from the group—a rebellion-free evolution. If they are allowed to articulate their dissent, they may even find school or home life less stifling than social life in a peer group where they are constantly pressured to conform. Encouraging this kind of critical thinking also protects them from negative influences (cults, crime, etc.), since their critical toolkit allows them to stay lucid when faced with wild, dangerous speech and behavior (alcohol, drugs, etc.).

kid critical thinking definition

From as early an age as possible, learning how to argue and reason critically using one’s capacities for inference allows for a balance in adolescence between individualization and an acceptance of heritage. 

Indeed, the need to distinguish oneself and to proclaim one’s individuality is always met by membership in a group — now often with the help of social media. This need is only met if these groups are not as prescriptive and stifling as the society from which the child is trying to escape and if they do not cause harm. 

Part of critical reasoning is the development of the capacity to question environmental, familial, and social norms and prescriptions. But this requires competence in a universal language made up of inferential logic and the art of arguing,  which comes from the critiqued society. Critical reasoning itself thus serves as lasting proof that one remains a part of that society. In the very act of distinguishing themselves from the pack, teenagers show they belong.

Critical reasoning anchors children in reality, allowing them to achieve individuality in their own unique way. Parents can help by supporting their children’s projects and encouraging them to engage with the world around them.

Building a sense of belonging.

Cultural heritage—including language, law, food, art, manners and customs, traditions, and scientific knowledge—represents an incredible resource that is at once imposed and offered. Teaching children critical thinking and reasoning means that they will not simply dismiss this priceless treasure in its entirety even though they will partially free themselves from it. Critical reasoning makes the process of individualization less violent and painful for both children and parents, thanks to the balance between the assimilation of culture and a healthy questioning of it.

In other words, critical reasoning—expressed through argumentative and logical know-how and rooted in self-esteem and love—anchors children in reality, allowing them to achieve individuality in their own unique way. Parents can help by supporting their children’s projects and encouraging them to engage with the world around them.

Cognitive faculties participate, in this way, in the psychological make-up of children. Critical reasoning has a twofold power: it is both integrator and liberator. It alerts us to the ways our culture forms us and helps us partly to overcome it. It is a fundamental pillar of our citizenship, on a national and global scale. 

Benefits of sense of belonging

Critical reasoning serves as proof to children that they are listened to and that they are the primary drivers of their own destinies. Subsequently, they are predisposed to put their faith in the future and in others. They become psychologically and intellectually equipped to imagine a future with other people, in which they undertake communal projects and attain important goals.

6. Analyzing Sources

Teenagers need support  to cope with and analyze disinformation and deception online. they should work on developing critical reading and browsing habits and learn to identify different kinds of deceptive reasoning. families can practice analyzing false or misleading information together. .

By the age of 13, young people likely already have significant experience navigating the internet. They have all made extensive use of a variety of websites in order to find answers to their questions or to help with papers and schoolwork.

The internet has democratized the transmission of information, allowing anyone and everyone to put forward their ideas, opinions, or hypotheses on multiple online platforms. People usually post things online in an affirmative style which presents any given statement, no matter how dubious or speculative, as a well-known fact.  

kid critical thinking definition

People’s personal blogs, companies’ promotional lifestyle websites, and free encyclopedias all feature articles on complex subjects, almost always with content that has not been vetted by any experts,  whose critical thinking skills and reasoning would be invaluable.

It seems that everyone—or almost everyone—has the tendency to grant at least some level of truth to everything they find online, especially if the site looks credible and its language is elegant. The same gullibility often applies to what we see on television or read in newspapers.

It is important to make young people aware of the phenomenon of “fake news” and to give them concrete proof of the great deal of false—even outrageous—information online. 

For example, it is possible to find videos claiming to prove that NASA’s moon landing was staged . Debunking these types of conspiracy theories, with the help of parents and educators, can be a useful exercise for students. As can discussing what makes certain sources reliable or unreliable.

kid critical thinking definition

For example, students could be shown a factual documentary on the moon landing and a video claiming the moon landing was faked and then asked to work out which one is false

In order to do this, they must use their logical knowledge to see if any false presumptions have been made. They must also ask themselves who made and commented in the videos. What is this person’s reputation? What are their professional qualifications? Has the document’s credibility been discussed in any forums?

Debunking these types of conspiracy theories, with the help of parents and educators, can be a useful exercise for students.

In analyzing these and similar sources, we will arrive at one of five possible situations:

An author has good intentions but his or her reasoning is flawed. The author draws unsubstantiated conclusions from trustworthy information. For example, we have proof that certain particles came out of thin air and did not evolve from anything. Some wrongly conclude that this proves the existence of God, since only God could create something from nothing. This information is true, but the reasoning is false, and the conclusion therefore does not follow. The solution involves the relationship between energy and mass in the equation E = mc 2 . In empty space, even the smallest amount of heat can cause spontaneous conversions of pure energy into matter.

An author has good intentions and reasons well, but uses false information. Here, the author can come to false conclusions, even if he or she reasons impeccably. For example, one could conclude that the acceleration of an object, induced by gravitational force, is dependent on its mass because if one drops a rock and a feather from a balcony, the rock will hit the ground before the feather. Here, the problem lies with the initial information, which is erroneous because it does not take the role of air resistance into account. The observation on which the argument is based is thus incorrect in this case, as is the conclusion. In reality, in a vacuum, the feather and the rock would reach the ground at exactly the same time.

It could be that the hypotheses and baseline observations, as well as the arguments drawn from it, are all incorrect. A false conclusion is likely to result.

Authors could be giving out false information intentionally with the aim of selling a product; harming another individual, group, or country; spreading a rumor to make themselves feel important; or sadistically causing mental anguish to others for their own enjoyment.

An author intends to get a point across by using an argument which appears to comply with logical reasoning but which actually contains one or more inferential leaps , deliberately introduced in order to prove that the conclusion is objective because it stems from rigorous thinking. Sophistry and paralogisms arise from this sort of trickery.

It is very important to expose adolescents to these five possible kinds of lies or deception, as well as to reflect on how to identify them by analyzing authors’ arguments and questioning the hypotheses or observations at the root of their arguments and their likely intentions, given the message’s context. For example, in an advertising context, we can understand that car manufacturers might benefit from lying about the amount of pollution produced by the vehicle they sell.

Nasreddin’s Sophisms

Paralogisms, 7. the critical mind, genuine critical thinking requires background knowledge. parents should help their children acquire broad and deep knowledge so they have the confidence and ability to call sources into question and avoid an unreflective acceptance of authority..

General knowledge is also a powerful tool for staying critical and skeptical in the face of this influx of information. It allows one to reconcile information and to check whether new data seems consistent with what they already know.

For example, if one were trying to evaluate arguments about how to address the recession caused by the 2008 global financial crisis, it would be useful to know the history of efforts to boost economic growth through government spending,  especially those undertaken during the Great Depression of the 1930s . Citizens versed in this history will be far better equipped to evaluate and criticize the proposals put forward by politicians and economists in their own time.

kid critical thinking definition

Having general knowledge also means that one does not hold even the most reliable sources sacred, knowing that careful thought often undermines received wisdom.

For example, Einstein’s theory of general relativity called Newton’s law of universal gravitation into question, even though Newton’s law had apparently been confirmed by a wealth of experiments and observations. Einstein’s general knowledge and his independent way of thinking allowed him to postulate that gravity was not simply a force but a warping of space-time in the vicinity of stars. Since then, independent observational astronomical predictions have always supported the theory of general relativity.

Treating certain sources as sacred can be as dangerous as uncritically accepting everything that comes from the internet or elsewhere. The same phenomenon is involved when religious texts are interpreted as legitimizing violence or intolerance.

The interpretation—as well as the cultural, social, geographical, and historical contextualization—of a piece of information is indispensable to the formation of a critical mind. But critical thinking is difficult. It takes training, as well as background knowledge, to determine the reliability of a source, and this determination can never be definitive or certain.

These examples show that if we are responsible for educating adolescents on the verification of sources, we must be careful not to give permanent, definitive credit to any piece of information or knowledge, even if it comes from a seemingly very reliable source. Critical thinking, provided that it does not lead to permanent doubt or paranoia, is truly a way of life, facilitating progress and freedom.

Fact-Checking

Verifying sources, 8. critical thinking and progress, critical thinking can help children not only learn to analyze the world around them, but act to try to change it. good critical thinking can foster productive interests, deeper engagement with social problems, and the attitudes of good citizenship. in this way critical thinking is vital to social progress..

A goal (or a project or “dream”) is the meeting of, on the one hand, an idea born out of a need or desire and, on the other, a method—an “algorithm” for bringing the idea into reality. But these two dimensions to every goal are, in fact, two sides of the same coin, two facets of creativity. 

kid critical thinking definition

As we have seen, the spark for critical thinking comes from self-esteem and unconditional love. This energy is indispensable to living with both a sense of joy and, at the same time, a continual dissatisfaction with the status quo. Taking joy in life is necessary to prevent this dissatisfaction from degenerating into depression or other pathologies. This joy provides the energy needed to turn dissatisfaction into ideas and dreams of change. 

But in order for an idea to turn into a project capable of changing the world, both a methodology and logical, communicative rigor are required. These allow a large number of people to understand a problem in the same terms and gear themselves toward the same objectives. Without these tools, efforts at problem-solving tend to devolve into emotionalism or factionalism.

Methodological rigor is rooted in critical reasoning. 

An education in critical thinking and reasoning is the best way to ensure a child can access goal-oriented thinking. A goal, much like the kind of formal logic we can exercise from the ages of 13 to 15, transforms the possible into the tangible. 

kid critical thinking definition

Goal-oriented thinking leads children in their adolescence to join or set up active groups or associations. Activity in such groups requires skills in both logic and communication, and it tends to support their further development. It pushes those undertaking such projects to strike a balance between asserting themselves and listening to others—between critiquing and taking what others say on board. 

In this sens e, critical thinking and the drive it inspires to undertake projects can be a kind of citizenship training. To rigorously and plainly critique a complex system (whether it be political, scientific, or philosophical, theological) is always to act as a citizen. It is beneficial to all.

Critical thinking not only enables students to reach their intellectual potential; it can also help them find purpose and, through purpose, happiness.

In this way critical thinking not only enables students to reach their intellectual potential; it can also help them find purpose and, through purpose, happiness. And, ultimately, it can help foster progress and social cohesion through cooperative action.

These links between critical thinking, undertaking projects, and citizenship should further encourage parents and educators to guide children toward this spirit of joyful dissatisfaction, as well as toward logical reasoning and the art of arguing.

If this mindset is acquired, teenagers won’t need pressure from above to take action as citizens or to participate in projects for social change that are bigger than themselves. There always lies the risk that when parents mandate this kind of participation as a kind of chore, children will reject it out of principle.

Instead of hoping their children will swallow whole what is offered them, parents should encourage them to seek the truth —to learn to reason and argue. Those around them, and society as a whole, will benefit from their skills, their independence, and their spirit.

Case Study 1

The concepts of intension and extension.

B eginning at around 13, students can begin formalizing their reasoning using intensional definitions. These formal definitions, which are internal to concepts themselves, rather than drawn from experience, can open up new avenues for reasoning and lead to new kinds of arguments. 

Consider the following scenario:

During a presidential election campaign, 14-year-old Lea defends a candidate who, in her eyes, is the only one worth voting for. She explains her candidate’s platform to her friends around the table at lunch in the school cafeteria and says how she wishes she already had the right to vote and that she begged her parents to vote on her behalf.

kid critical thinking definition

Lea’s arguments seem to have convinced her friends, but Anna, sitting at one end of the table, interjects: ″Who cares? As my parents say, all presidents are liars! I’m never going to vote.”

The other girls and boys present agree loudly. A surprised Lea tries to think of a comeback, but can’t think of what to say.

The bell rings. Everyone gets up to go back to class.

When she gets home after school, Lea tells her mother about the scene at lunch and asks her opinion: ″What would you have said to Anna?”

If you were Lea’s mother, how would you have replied? How can you use reason to respond to Anna’s argument, which seems to be an argument from authority ?

There are two ways to determine whether all presidents are liars or not:

Extensional method: Research the history of presidential elections, and compare the promises made by candidates to their actions after being elected. This method will allow you to determine whether all presidents over the course of history have lied. Perhaps they all have lied. But even in this case, Anna’s argument would be valid but only up to the present day , since one cannot predict the future and, therefore, what a new president will do. Perhaps Lea could then defend her favored candidate by arguing that, once elected, he or she will be different.

Intensional method: Research political science and show that the electoral system and certain institutions pressure candidates to lie in order to get elected and that this is considered the “rules of the game.” If this can be demonstrated, it would be a valid pattern for the past and the future. In this hypothesis, Anna’s argument will be valid for the present and the future (so long as the same institutions remain in effect). Notice, however, that this method gives Lea an opportunity for more subtle reasoning. All presidents may end up making false promises or misleading the public on certain points, but we can distinguish between deliberate, malicious lies and those that arise from the pressures of the office. This would allow her to poke holes in Anna’s rationale for not voting, since certain candidates may still be more honest than others.

Case Study 2

Flawed reasoning.

Use these examples of flawed reasoning to introduce logical vocabulary and help your children identify flawed reasoning  and how to identify flaws in an argument.. More definitions and basic concepts can be found here .

kid critical thinking definition

The examples are based on famous example of deductive reasoning attributed to Aristotle. In the exercises, Aristotle’s example is distorted in various ways, either using false information or faulty reasoning. Challenge your children to identify exactly why these arguments fail. 

Here are some definitions of the terms used below: 

Premises are the statements or information on which an argument is based (in these cases, the first two lines). 

The conclusion (the third line in these examples) is the statement drawn from the premises.

When an argument is valid , that means its conclusion follows logically from its premises.

When an argument is sound , that means it is both valid and based on premises that are true, meaning its conclusion is also true.

These examples can help students to break up reasoning into logical steps, make the logical steps of an argument explicit to themselves, and identify where reasoning breaks down. Critical thinking must enable us to detect logical errors and to recognize whether they lead us to false conclusions. Notice, however, that flawed reasoning does not guarantee a false conclusion. 

Aristotle’s Reasoning

“All human beings are mortal. Socrates is a human being. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.”

The premises are true, the reasoning is valid, and the conclusion is, as a result, true.

All human beings are women. Socrates is a human being. Therefore, Socrates is a woman.

One of the premises is false, the reasoning is valid, but the conclusion is false.

Half the human race is female. Socrates is a human being. Therefore, Socrates is female.

The premises are true, but the reasoning is invalid, and the conclusion is false.

Half the human race is male. Socrates is a human being. Therefore, Socrates is male.

The premises are true, the reasoning is invalid, but the conclusion is true.

Case Study 3

Peer pressure emerges in adolescent social groups as children attempt to assert independence from their parents and build their own identity through involvement in peer groups. This can lead to a number of paradoxical problems as children are pulled between an emerging sense of self and a need to belong. Even as their children seek to separate, parents can offer them help and support in working through some of these conflicts. 

kid critical thinking definition

Consider this scenario:

Twelve-year-old David has just entered sixth grade at a big middle school in the city. He is a bit lost and finds a group of boys his age to spend time with during class and at recess. They all get to know each other over the next few weeks.

At the end of October, one of the boys suggests that they draw a big skull and crossbones on their backpacks in permanent marker to show that they belong to the group. Within a few days, all of the boys in the group have proudly drawn a skull and crossbones onto the front of their backpacks— everyone, that is, except David. He really likes his backpack. He picked it out himself and his parents bought it for him for the new school year. Furthermore, he has never had an affinity for skeletons, and skulls and crossbones hold no special meaning for him.

When the group reunites in the playground one Friday morning, one of the boys goes over to David and threatens him, saying, “If you don’t draw a skull and crossbones on your backpack, you’re out of the group!” The other children back the mean kid up.

Over the weekend, David is faced with a dilemma. He can either keep his backpack the way he likes it, even if that means being excluded from the group, or draw a skull and crossbones on it to show that he belongs to the group.

On Sunday night, he decides to talk to his parents about the situation. If you were in their place, what advice would you give him?

At dinner, his father offers him some advice:

″David, you shouldn’t see this as a problem with only two solutions. Just tell your friends that you don’t like either option and that you have another idea.”

″That won’t work. They told me that it had to be one way or the other,” replies David.

″Well, you should at least give it a try,” suggests his mother. “Tell them that you really like being part of the group and that you like them as friends, but that you don’t want to ruin your new backpack by drawing on it. Tell them that, in a group, everyone should have their freedom and that you shouldn’t have to do the same thing as everyone else all the time. Ask them to let you stay in their group, which means a lot to you, without having to do something you don’t want to. That’s a third solution.”

In this situation, the group of boys want David to show he’s part of the group by adopting a common code. David is under pressure to comply and must make a decision. The easiest solution for David would be to succumb to peer pressure. He could also stand his ground and refuse, but this would probably cause him pain since he would have to deal with the group’s disapproval and possible exclusion.

The group does not tolerate non-conformity since it threatens its existence. Eventually, however, resisting peer pressure could play in David’s favor, as his show of independence could earn him the respect of the other group members and thereby bolster his self-esteem.

There is no ″right decision.” Everything depends on David’s level of self-esteem, which will determine his capacity to stand firm in the face of the consequences of his choices.

Case Study 4

Nasreddin, a very famous figure in the Arab Muslim world, was the author of often absurd stories. Families enjoy reading his stories together and refuting his biased reasoning, which is designed to sharpen our critical thinking skills and ability to foil sophistry. Identifying the flaws in Nasreddin’s reasoning is a useful logic game and a good way to introduce logical concepts. Challenge your children to show where Nasreddin goes wrong, and come up with equivalent examples from current events or everyday life that involve the same flawed reasoning.

kid critical thinking definition

Very early one morning, Nasreddin was up sowing salt all around his house.

“What on earth are you doing with all that salt, Nasreddin?” asked his neighbor.

“I’m putting it around my house to ward off tigers.”

“But there aren’t any tigers here.”

“Well then, that’s proof that the salt worked!”

The Moon and the Sun

One day, Nasreddin was asked:

“Tell us, Nasreddin, which is more important: the sun or the moon?”

“The moon, of course,” he replied immediately.

“Because the moon appears at night, and that’s when we need light most.”

The Power of Age

Nasreddin arrived at a café one day, looking proud and happy.

“Hey, Nasreddin,” his friends called to him. “You look as if you’ve just found treasure.”

“Even better, even better,” he replied. “I am 70 and I have just discovered that I am still as strong as I was when I was 20.”

“And how did you discover that?”

“Simple! You see that huge rock in front of my house? Well, when I was 20, I couldn’t move it.

“Today, I tried again and I still can’t move it, just like when I was 20.”

Case Study 5

Paralogisms are fallacious arguments that appeal to evidence that is misleading, partial, or irrelevant.  Below are some of the main strategies deployed in paralogisms. Ask you children to explain how the statements distort the facts or attempt to deceptively influence an audience. Use the paralogism examples as a starting point for discussing other examples in public life, advertising, or everyday conversation.

kid critical thinking definition

Paralogism Exercise #1

Spot the paralogisms in the following statements and explain why the reasoning is flawed. 

″If smoking were bad for your health, it would be banned. Smoking is not banned. Therefore, smoking is not bad for your health.”

″If I am sick, I go see the doctor. I am not going to see the doctor. Therefore, I am not sick.”

″Intensive farming allows us to feed all human beings. Organic farming is not intensive farming. Therefore, organic farming will not allow us to feed all human beings.”

Paralogism Exercise #2

Three false dilemmas are presented below. Why are these apparent dilemmas not real dilemmas?

A close friend who is going to jump into a freezing lake on New Year’s Eve says, “A real friend wouldn’t let me do this alone.”

The night before election day, a candidate for office says, “It’s me or chaos.”

A slogan in an advertisement for Sneakie sports shoes reads, “Cool people wear Sneakies.”

Paralogism Exercise #3

Often biased or flawed reasoning uses false generalizations. How can we contradict the following statements?

Upon hearing that a  politician is being investigated for tax fraud: “See? All politicians are corrupt.”

“Hypnosis works for giving up smoking. My brother managed to quit that way.”

“Social media is the best way to find love. Several of my friends met their partners that way.”

Paralogism Exercise #4

Beware of an “argument from authority,” especially those circulating online.

″Many scientists dispute the global warming phenomenon.” Who are these “scientists”? On which scientific studies have they based their opinions? Do they have personal, political, or economic connections with people or organizations that could benefit from challenging global warming? It is important to ask oneself all of these questions before accepting an argument.

Paralogism Exercise #5

Arguments based on numbers:

″This singer’s video already has 500,000 views online.”  What does this say about the quality of their music?

″X93 – the latest phone, already owned by 2,000,000 people worldwide.”  Does this mean that this device would suit my needs? Is this an indicator of its quality?

Paralogism Exercise #6

Arguments based on fear:

″You say that you’re against the death penalty, but murder will be much more common if we abolish it as a deterrent.”

Case Study 6

Several media companies offer fact-checking services. It is beneficial to consult them with teenagers and to pose questions about the ways in which media can distort the truth. These services can offer insight into the techniques various organizations and bad actors use to deceive audiences, as well as into the bias that can skew the information put out by various news organizations. Discussing these examples with your children get help raise awareness of the various ploys used to manipulate readers and viewers, and help them hone their analytical and critical skills.

Here are links to some trustworthy fact-checking sites: Politifact   |   Snopes  |    FactCheck.org  |    Poynter Institute

Examining the false stories fact-checked by these organization can be a helpful exercise. Here is an example of a false story fact-checked by Snopes:

kid critical thinking definition

Understanding examples like these can give students insight into techniques fake news sites use to hook and deceive an audience. Here, for example, the violent image may grab viewers’ attention and cause them to let their critical guard now. Attaching the fake story to a genuine news item (Samsung’s smartphone recall) also makes readers more likely to believe and share the false story, since it appears like a development in an ongoing story.

Student’s can also learn from the fact-checkers’ analysis. Here, they track down the original photos to show how the fake site has repurposed them, and they dig into the website reputation and background.

Researchers Sam Wineburg and Sarah McGrew recommend teaching students to navigate the internet more like fact-checkers. Students, they write, tend to “read vertically , evaluating online articles as if they were printed news stories.” Fact checkers, on the other hand, “read laterally , jumping off the original page, opening up a new tab, Googling the name of the organization or its president.”

Fact-checkers, Wineburg and McGrew write, are also less inclined to trust a website’s own description of its mission. They look for outside evidence from multiple sources to confirm or refute the website’s claims. And they don’t get hooked by enticing language or images, instead reading through a whole page of search results or information before deciding reflectively what links to follow or where else to look.

Finding good information online — and steering clear of bad information—are skills that can be taught and learned. They are increasingly vital at a time where multiple interests are leveraging the internet to attempt to monopolize our attention and shape our beliefs.

Case Study 7

Young people receive information from everywhere (social media, emails, texts, newspapers, television, online videos). Given the wealth of information coming in, much of it coming through or recommended by friends whose judgment and endorsement we are inclined to trust, it is easy to passively accept what we see or read. Young people should learn through examples how to resist this tendency and how to conduct thorough analyses of the media they are exposed to everyday.

It is important for parents to accompany them in conducting this sort of analysis so they can teach them how to critically evaluate these sources of information and how to avoid being misled. Below is a set of questions that you can apply to news sources with your children. They can be applied to any media source (the internet, printed media, TV/radio, etc.). We’ve divided these sets of questions into two sections: questioning the source and questioning the content.

1. Questioning the Source

  • What is the source? Is it reliable? 

It is often possible to cast doubt on a source simply by looking at surface features. There are numerous fake news websites with unusual names or URLs (like, for example, worldnewsdailyreport.com) that should tip readers off to their unreliability. In addition, if a website looks poorly designed and managed, contains typos or formatting errors, this is also an important indicator that it is likely unreliable, if not intentionally false. Fake news also may also come under more plausible publication names, like, for example, the “Denver Guardian,” and with more convincing design. A simple internet search can usually bring up information from credible sources alerting the reader to the fraudulent nature of the source. Here is a list of unreliable news sources from Factcheck.org. With your child, practice determining the reliability of different kinds of information.

Who owns the source? Is the content sponsored?

When evaluating a source, it is also possible to do research into details about the source, such as who owns the source or who is funding the content or supporting it via advertising. It is often possible this way to identify potential biases or attempts to influence readers that may not be immediately clear at a first reading. Reliable sources may also sell space in their publications or websites to sponsors, who have obvious interests in what information is presented and the slant with which it is presented. See for example this “ China Daily ” paid post in the New York Times, which is placed on the Times website by Chinese state media. Exploring how and why information like this is presented can be a good learning experience. It is also useful to discuss how sponsored content is marked on this and other websites.

  • Who is the author of the content? What are their credentials? What possible biases may they have?

In addition to asking questions about publications, it is important to know who has written a given article or op-ed , what their reasons for doing so may be, and what expertise they have in the given area. Doing so can help determine the reliability of the information offered, the possible slants or biases with which the information is presented, and any financial or other interest the writer may have in the matter discussed. Most reliable websites will offer at least some of an opinion writer’s background, but an internet search can often return more detailed information. It is also important to help students recognize that an editorial author’s potential biases do not necessarily render the content absolutely unreliable. Critical thinking should not lead to knee-jerk rejection of all potentially biased opinions. Rather, a fair-minded independent thinker takes potential bias into account in evaluating content, weighing it along with other factors, like the strength of the argument and the evidence put forward.

2. Questioning the Content

  • What type of content is being offered? What is the issue under discussion?

Before we embark on an analysis of the content of a given source, it is important to identify what type of content is being offered. The way we approach analyzing an advertisement will be very different from the way we analyze a news story or an opinion piece. It’s also important that students be able to identify when a particular source is purposefully blurring the lines between categories. For example, so-called “advertorials” can disguise advertising or promotion in the guise of opinion pieces or feature articles. News stories may likewise present information in a particular misleading or biased manner, trying to persuade the reader of something, but without making it clear that they are actually offering an opinion, not simply news.

  • What sources are drawn on for the information or argument given? Are they reliable?

Even when we are satisfied that a source we are reading is generally reliable, it is worthwhile to pay attention to its own sources of information. If a particular piece of content cites facts without providing sources there is good reason to question the information. Moreover, students should get in the habit of following links and citations to verify that the secondary information comes from a reliable source and that the original content is characterizing it accurately.

  • What are the main arguments being offered? Are they strong and sound? Are they consistent with each other?

Media sources use a variety of means to try to convince the audience of a particular point or point of view. It is important to train ourselves to be conscious of what these means are and whether they are valid. If an article or video simply relies on emotional reactions or strong images to prove its point, without trying to put forward an argument, we should be skeptical. On the other hand, if there is an argument presented, we should begin training children to break it down and analyze it. Parents and their children can practice breaking down the argument into premises and conclusions, evaluating whether the evidence for the premises is strong and the conclusions follow rationally from them.

  • How might one argue against the position put forward?

Another important exercise to carry out, even if you generally agree with a position put forward, is to ask how it might be opposed. This can help identify weak points in the argument and show where evidence, even if it’s reliable, may not fully support the point of view being put forward. To this end, it can be helpful to research articles with opposing points of view, but which rely on the same set of facts. Discuss the merits of each article and how you would argue for and against each of them. 

Complete the quiz to review important points in the guide.

  • The stage when children can begin to grasp and manipulate abstract ideas.
  • The stage when children are able to study calculus and other college-level math.
  • The stage when children begin arguing more persuasively.
  • The stage when children start dressing more elegantly.
  • Parents can enroll their children in college exam prep courses as early as possible.
  • Parents can go over children’s essays and other schoolwork closely and dispute their reasoning.
  • Parents can use everyday examples to demonstrate the meanings of terms like proposition, contradiction, and validity.
  • Parents can work on improving their own understanding of logic.
  • Parents can discuss logical fallacies in popular media or current events with their children.
  • The intension is a formal definition of the concept; the extension is a group of examples coming under the concept.
  • The intension is a narrow definition of the concept; the extension is a broader definition.
  • The intension is the role a concept plays in logic; the extension is its role in everyday life.
  • The intension is how the concept is used; the extension is a formal definition of the concept.
  • As critical thinkers, they will be better equipped to manipulate other people and make their way to the top of social circles.
  • Critical thinking gives them tools to show their superiority to their peers and gain social esteem.
  • Critical thinking allows them to react thoughtfully to social pressure and assert their independence from friend groups when appropriate.
  • As crtical thinkers, they will be more likely to concentrate on their studies and ignore social life and their own individuality.
  • Engage them in arguments and challenge them to improve their criticisms (if they’re warranted). They’ll learn to argue with more moderation and subtlety.
  • Get into shouting matches with them. They need to see that their mistakes have consequences.
  • Walk away. Teenagers need to learn that overheated opinions and conversations will get them nowhere.
  • Bring in a teacher or other adult authority figure to mediate. The parent-child relationship is too emotionally charged for productive arguments.
  • Is the content meant to be news or opinion?
  • Who owns the source? Or who is supporting the content? What interests might they have?
  • Does the content’s impact rely on emotional language or sensationalistic images?
  • Was the author educated at a prestigious college?
  • What do other reliable sources say about the issue under discussion?
  • A convincing counterargument
  • The study of planetary orbits
  • The merging of two arguments into one
  • A deceptive or misleading argument

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BrightChamps Blog

5 Essential Critical Thinking Skills Every Parent Should Teach Their Kids

Are you looking to equip your children with essential critical thinking skills for success in life? As parents, it is vital to foster their intellectual growth by teaching them key skills. Encourage them to ask questions, analyze information objectively, and evaluate different perspectives.

Teach them to think critically, problem-solve creatively, and make informed decisions. These skills will empower them to navigate a complex world, fostering independence, adaptability, and lifelong learning.

Table of contents

Introduction, 1. problem identification and definition, 2. analysis and evaluation, 3. creative thinking and innovation, 4. decision making and problem solving, 5. communication and collaboration, frequently asked questions.

In today’s world, critical thinking skills have become increasingly important. They enable individuals to navigate a rapidly changing and complex environment, making informed decisions and solving problems effectively. For children, developing critical thinking skills provides numerous benefits.

In academics, critical thinking enhances their ability to analyze information, evaluate arguments, and think independently, leading to improved academic performance. In problem-solving, critical thinking promotes creative and logical reasoning, enabling children to find innovative solutions.

Additionally, critical thinking empowers children to make informed decisions by considering multiple perspectives, weighing evidence, and understanding consequences. Ultimately, these skills equip children with the tools they need for success in various aspects of life.

Critical thinking skills for kids are essential in developing their ability to analyze information, solve problems, and make informed decisions. Encouraging children to ask questions, consider different perspectives, and evaluate evidence helps them become independent thinkers and prepares them to face challenges with confidence and creativity as they grow and learn.

kid critical thinking definition

Critical thinking is the ability to objectively analyze information, evaluate arguments, and make reasoned judgments. It is a vital skill in today’s world as it helps individuals navigate the complexities of life and make informed decisions. To teach kids how to identify and define problems effectively, parents can engage in the following practical tips and activities:

1. Encourage questioning : Encourage your child to ask questions about the world around them. Teach them to inquire about why things work the way they do and what problems exist that need solving.

2. Define the problem : Teach your child to clearly define the problem they are facing. Help them break it down into smaller, manageable parts. This promotes critical thinking by focusing on the core issue.

3. Brainstorming sessions : Engage in brainstorming activities with your child. Encourage them to think of as many potential solutions as possible, without judgment. This fosters creative and divergent thinking.

4. Analyze cause and effect : Help your child identify the root causes of a problem and the potential effects of different solutions. This trains them to think critically about the consequences of their decisions.

Also, Conflict resolution skills for kids include the ability to analyze cause and effect, which enables them to identify the root of conflicts and their consequences. By understanding the reasons behind disagreements and how actions impact others, children can develop empathy and find constructive ways to resolve conflicts, fostering harmonious relationships and effective communication with their peers.

5. Role-playing scenarios : Create real-life scenarios where your child encounters problems and challenges. Encourage them to think critically about the situation, consider different perspectives, and devise solutions.

RoboCHAMPS programs encourage critical thinking by engaging children in hands-on activities that foster problem-solving skills through the exciting world of robotics and coding.

Real-life examples showcasing the application of critical thinking skills include:

1. Current events analysis : Discuss news articles or current events with your child, encouraging them to think critically about the information presented, identify biases, and evaluate different viewpoints.

2. Science experiments : Engage your child in hands-on experiments where they need to observe, analyze data, and draw conclusions. This nurtures their critical thinking abilities.

3. Decision-making & Problem-solving scenarios : Present your child with hypothetical situations that require them to make decisions. Encourage them to weigh different options, consider potential outcomes, and make informed choices. Encourage your child to tackle puzzles, riddles, or logical problems. Teaching kids about emotions and decision-making is vital for their emotional intelligence and personal development. By helping them identify and understand their feelings, children can learn to manage emotions in a healthy way.

By incorporating these practical tips and real-life examples into your parenting approach, you can help your child develop and apply critical thinking skills effectively, empowering them to thrive academically and in problem-solving and decision-making situations.

kid critical thinking definition

Critical thinking is a cognitive skill that involves analyzing and evaluating information, arguments, and evidence in a logical and objective manner. It helps individuals make well-informed decisions, solve problems effectively, and understand complex concepts. To help children develop the ability to analyze and evaluate information, arguments, and evidence, parents can employ the following strategies:

1. Teach information literacy : Help your child distinguish between reliable and unreliable sources of information. Teach them how to fact-check and verify information using credible sources.

2. Ask probing questions : Encourage your child to ask questions about the information they encounter. Teach them to question the source, motives, biases, and logical consistency of the information.

3. Teach logical reasoning & Discuss different perspectives : Introduce your child to basic principles of logic, such as identifying logical fallacies and understanding deductive and inductive reasoning. This equips them to assess the strength of arguments. Encourage your child to consider multiple viewpoints on a topic.

Engaging exercises and scenarios to practice critical analysis and evaluation include:

1. Debate or discussion activities : Organize debates or discussions where your child can analyze different perspectives, present evidence, and evaluate arguments.

2. Case studies : Present your child with real or fictional case studies where they must analyze the given information, consider different factors, and make reasoned judgments or recommendations.

3. Critical reading : Select age-appropriate books, articles, or essays that challenge your child’s thinking. Encourage them to critically analyze the content, identify main arguments, and evaluate evidence presented.

By implementing these strategies and engaging in exercises that promote critical analysis and evaluation, parents can help their children develop and refine their critical thinking skills, enabling them to become discerning and analytical thinkers.

CodeCHAMPS empowers young learners to develop essential critical thinking skills through its interactive coding courses, enabling them to creatively tackle challenges in the digital realm.

kid critical thinking definition

Importance of creativity in critical thinking:

1. Out-of-the-box problem-solving : Creativity adds a valuable dimension to critical thinking by encouraging individuals to explore unconventional approaches and alternative solutions. It allows children to think beyond traditional boundaries, facilitating innovative problem-solving and encouraging them to explore diverse perspectives.

2. Adaptability and flexibility : In a rapidly changing world, creative thinking enables children to adapt to new challenges and situations. It encourages them to embrace ambiguity, think flexibly, and generate unique ideas. By nurturing creativity alongside critical thinking, children develop the ability to adapt, innovate, and find creative solutions to complex problems.

3. Expression and communication : Creativity enhances children’s ability to express their thoughts and ideas in imaginative and engaging ways. It empowers them to communicate their critical thinking effectively, whether through art, writing, storytelling, or other creative outlets. This combination of critical thinking and creativity allows children to share their insights and perspectives more compellingly.

Techniques and exercises to foster creative thinking in children:

1. Brainstorming : Encourage children to engage in brainstorming sessions where they generate as many ideas as possible, without judgment. Create a safe and supportive environment where they feel free to express their thoughts and explore unconventional solutions.

Also, Stress management for kids can be facilitated through brainstorming activities. Encouraging children to engage in creative problem-solving and express their feelings and concerns during brainstorming sessions helps them develop coping strategies, reduce anxiety, and build resilience in the face of stressors, ultimately promoting their emotional well-being and overall mental health.

2. Divergent thinking activities : Engage children in activities that encourage them to think divergently, such as open-ended questions, riddles, or puzzles with multiple possible answers. This encourages them to explore different possibilities and consider various perspectives.

3. Creative exploration : Provide children with opportunities for creative exploration, such as arts and crafts, imaginative play, or storytelling. Encourage them to think creatively, experiment, and express their ideas through different mediums. This helps foster their creative thinking skills while allowing them to develop their unique voices.

Creative thinking often enables individuals to solve problems in unconventional ways. For instance, in the field of medicine, creative thinking has led to the development of new surgical techniques, medical devices, and treatments that revolutionize healthcare and improve patient outcomes.

By nurturing creative thinking in children, parents can unlock their full potential for imaginative problem-solving and encourage them to explore new possibilities.

kid critical thinking definition

Effective decision-making and problem-solving are essential skills that empower individuals to make informed choices and overcome challenges. Here’s a step-by-step guide for parents to teach kids these approaches:

1. Identify the problem : Help your child clearly define the problem they are facing. Encourage them to understand the root cause and break it down into smaller, manageable parts.

2. Gather information : Teach your child to collect relevant information about the problem. This may involve researching, interviewing, or observing.

3. Generate alternatives : Encourage your child to brainstorm multiple possible solutions or approaches. Encourage creative thinking and explore various options without judgment.

4. Evaluate options : Help your child analyze and evaluate each alternative. Discuss the pros and cons, potential consequences, and feasibility of each option.

5. Make a decision : Guide your child in making a final decision. Encourage them to select the option that aligns with their goals, values, and the information they have gathered. Emphasize the importance of being confident in their choice. Positive thinking for kids empowers them to approach decision-making with confidence and optimism. Encouraging a positive mindset helps children believe in their abilities, embrace challenges, and make decisions that align with their values and goals, leading to a more fulfilling and successful path in life.

6. Implement the decision & Reflect and learn : Assist your child in developing an action plan to implement their decision. Help them consider any necessary resources, timelines, or steps to take. After the decision has been implemented, engage in a reflection process with your child.

Explore more about computer coding for kids

Practical scenarios for children to apply decision-making strategies:

1. Role-playing situations : Create scenarios where your child must make decisions, such as a fictional business venture or a community project. Allow them to navigate through challenges and make choices while considering various factors.

2. Everyday choices : Encourage your child to practice decision-making in their daily lives, such as choosing extracurricular activities, planning their schedule, or deciding what to eat for lunch. Discuss the decision-making process with them and ask for their reasoning.

3. Ethical dilemmas : Present your child with ethical dilemmas and discuss the different perspectives and potential consequences of each choice. This encourages them to think critically about moral considerations and make principled decisions.

These skills will enable children to approach problems and choices in a thoughtful and strategic manner, leading to better outcomes and fostering their independence and problem-solving abilities.

kid critical thinking definition

Children’s language development is a fascinating and complex process that begins from birth and continues throughout childhood. During this period, children learn to understand and use language, gradually progressing from simple sounds and gestures to forming words, sentences, and eventually engaging in conversations. Effective communication and collaboration play crucial roles in enhancing critical thinking skills. They enable individuals to articulate their thoughts, listen actively, exchange ideas, and work collaboratively to solve problems. Here are some tips for parents:

1. Develop communication skills:

   – Encourage open dialogue : Create a supportive environment where your child feels comfortable expressing their thoughts and opinions without fear of judgment.

   – Teach effective expression : Help your child develop clarity in their communication by encouraging them to articulate their ideas, use appropriate language, and organize their thoughts.

   – Promote non-verbal communication : Teach your child the importance of non-verbal cues, such as maintaining eye contact, using appropriate body language, and active engagement in conversations.

2. Foster active listening:

   – Model active listening : Set an example by actively listening to your child and showing genuine interest in their ideas. Reflect back their thoughts to show that you are engaged.

   – Practice paraphrasing : Teach your child to paraphrase or summarize what others have said to ensure understanding and demonstrate active listening.

   – Encourage asking questions : Promote asking thoughtful questions to gather more information and show a genuine desire to understand others’ perspectives.

Mindfulness exercises for kids , such as focused listening, can promote a sense of calm and self-awareness. Engaging children in activities where they actively listen to sounds in their environment, like bird songs or flowing water, helps them develop attention and concentration skills while cultivating mindfulness, which can benefit their emotional well-being and overall mental focus.

3. Encourage teamwork:

   – Collaborative projects : Engage your child in collaborative projects or group activities that require teamwork. This can include building puzzles, creating art together, or working on science experiments as a team.

   – Role-playing exercises : Organize role-playing scenarios where your child must work in a team to solve problems or make decisions. This allows them to understand the dynamics of teamwork and the importance of effective communication.

   – Foster empathy and respect : Teach your child to appreciate diverse perspectives, value others’ contributions, and practice empathy. This creates a positive and inclusive atmosphere for effective collaboration.

Activities that encourage collaborative problem-solving and communication:

1. Group discussions : Initiate group discussions where children can exchange ideas and opinions on specific topics. Encourage them to actively listen, respect others’ viewpoints, and build on each other’s ideas.

2. Collaborative storytelling : Encourage children to work together to create a story, with each child contributing a part. This activity fosters communication, creativity, and teamwork as they listen to each other’s ideas and build a coherent narrative.

3. Team-building games : Engage children in team-building activities or games, such as building structures with blocks or solving puzzles collectively. These activities promote collaboration, effective communication, and problem-solving skills.

By focusing on developing communication skills, active listening, and teamwork, parents can nurture their children’s ability to effectively express themselves, understand others, and work collaboratively. Child development and communication skills are closely intertwined, as effective communication plays a crucial role in a child’s overall growth and well-being. As children develop their language and social skills, they learn to express their thoughts, emotions, and needs more clearly, which enhances their ability to build relationships, problem-solve, and succeed in various aspects of life.

kid critical thinking definition

In conclusion, effective communication, active listening, and collaboration are essential components of developing critical thinking skills in children. By fostering these skills, parents can empower their children to think critically, solve problems, and make informed decisions.

For more information regarding robotics kits for kids . Click here!

Teaching children how to express their thoughts clearly, actively listen to others, and work collaboratively allows them to exchange ideas, consider diverse perspectives, and find innovative solutions collectively. Through various activities and practical tips, parents can provide opportunities for their children to practice and strengthen these skills.

By nurturing effective communication and collaboration, parents pave the way for their children to become independent thinkers and problem solvers, equipped to navigate the complexities of the world.

Exploring the diverse educational offerings on BrightChamps opens up exciting opportunities for children to learn and thrive in a supportive and dynamic online environment.

To get your hands on more such educational and free resources on coding, robotics, game development, etc., do check out the  Brightchamps Blog Page  now! Learn about robotics for kids also.

Critical thinking skills are important for children’s development as they enhance problem-solving abilities, foster independent thinking, and promote informed decision-making.

Parents can foster critical thinking skills in children from an early age by encouraging curiosity, asking open-ended questions, and providing opportunities for exploration and problem-solving.

Practical activities to enhance critical thinking in kids include puzzles, debates, experiments, and analyzing real-life situations to encourage analysis, evaluation, and logical reasoning.

Critical thinking skills benefit children academically by improving comprehension, analytical skills, and problem-solving abilities. They also help in making sound decisions and navigating challenges in daily life.

The five essential critical thinking skills for parents to teach their kids include analysis, evaluation, logical reasoning, problem-solving, and information literacy.

Parents can incorporate critical thinking skills into everyday conversations by encouraging thoughtful questioning, discussing multiple perspectives, and fostering open-mindedness during discussions and problem-solving situations.

Common challenges in teaching critical thinking skills include resistance to questioning, limited exposure to diverse perspectives, and difficulty in evaluating information. Overcoming these challenges requires patience, modeling, and providing varied learning experiences.

Parents can nurture creativity alongside critical thinking by encouraging imaginative play, promoting arts and crafts, and providing opportunities for self-expression and divergent thinking.

Parents can assess their children’s critical thinking skills through observation, analyzing problem-solving approaches, evaluating decision-making processes, and reviewing their ability to analyze and evaluate information.

Recommended resources for parents interested in cultivating critical thinking skills in children include books like “Mind in the Making” by Ellen Galinsky and “Thinking, Fast and Slow” by Daniel Kahneman, as well as online platforms that offer critical thinking activities and resources for children.

Team BrightChamps

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Statistical Shenanigans

These lesson plans and worksheets teach students in grades 9 and up the statistical principles they need to analyze data rationally.

Critikid’s Story

My name is Stephanie and I'm an online science teacher and educational video creator. I started Critikid because I noticed a shortage of online critical thinking resources for children. I had been teaching children about logical fallacies and cognitive biases for a while, so I knew that not only could they understand those topics, but they loved learning about them!

I am funding this project through my savings, so a current priority is keeping costs down. My husband, who is a web developer, he designed and built this site. I am teaching online science classes to cover my living expenses, so all money made from sales will go towards funding more content. I don’t have a marketing budget at this time, so if you want to support this project, it would help immensely if you spread the word.

Critikid’s Mission

Critikid’s goal is to give children the tools they need to rationally think about and discuss controversial issues, not to tell them the conclusions they should draw. Critikid’s stance is pro-logic and anti-fallacy. Besides that, I am avoiding taking stances on the side, especially about hot political topics.

Critical thinking is particularly important for children these days. They spend a huge portion of their lives on the Internet, which abounds in polarizing opinions, logical fallacies, and misinformation. This is the battlefield that the kids of today must withstand, and critical thinking is their armor. Critikid’s goal is to help them forge it.

Critical thinking is careful thinking. It is the process of rationally analyzing information, arguments, and even our own thought processes. It lets us distinguish between logical and flawed reasoning in order to communicate clearly, even when communicating with ourselves.

Firstly, critical thinking makes us better communicators. Logical fallacies frequently find their way into conversations, and when we can’t identify them, they tend to derail discussions and make them unproductive. The ability to recognize when you or your conversational partner is committing a logical fallacy can help get the conversation back on track.

Critical thinking also makes us better decision-makers. Understanding cognitive biases means understanding our minds. When we can recognize our cognitive biases, we can get a better idea of why we make the decisions we do.

People who try to sell us products or ideas know all about logical fallacies and cognitive biases, and they know how to use them to their advantage. The ability to think critically helps us to defend ourselves against manipulation.

Children can do activities to develop their critical thinking skills even before they can talk. A toy that lights up when a button is pressed teaches cause and effect, peek-a-boo teaches object permanence, and nesting toys help develop problem-solving skills.

Once kids can talk, they can start to do simple experiments. For example, a parent might ask, “What do you think will happen when I mix the red and blue paint?” The child can make a prediction and then test it by mixing the paints. In the future, I'll post critical thinking activities for kids on this site.

Critikid will offer various levels targeting different age groups. Fallacy Detectors Part 1 is aimed at children ages 8-12. The formal logic course that I am now working on will target kids 13 and up.

I’ve been teaching critical thinking to children for years now, so I know that they are not only capable of understanding it, but they love it. What kid wouldn’t find it amusing to hear about the silly mistakes that even adults can make? Moreover, childhood is the best time to strengthen the mind’s defenses and teach it to recognize its biases. It only gets harder as you get older.

My name is Stephanie Simoes. I’ve been a science teacher and children’s educational video creator for many years. My background is in biology and philosophy. I’m running this project with a very small team of talented freelancers.

If you are interested in learning more about my online science classes, please email me at [email protected]

What's next

kid critical thinking definition

Fallacy Detectors Part 2

Coming soon! - The fallacy-busting quest continues with 10 more fallacies to defeat.

kid critical thinking definition

Cognitive Biases

Coming Soon - Discover the sneaky tricks your brain plays on you and become a better decision-maker.

kid critical thinking definition

Social Media Simulator

Coming Soon - Prepare yourself for the fallacy-filled online world.

Critical Thinking Skills: Shape A Bright Future for Kids 2024

kid critical thinking definition

In today's rapidly evolving world, the ability to think critically has become more crucial than ever. 

Critical thinking, a skill often touted but seldom defined, involves the objective analysis and evaluation of an issue to form a judgement. 

It is not enough to be a competent problem solver; you must also be able to handle the complex issues of life with assurance and clarity. 

For children, developing this skill is not just a stepping stone to academic success but a foundational element for lifelong learning and adaptability. 

As parents and educators, fostering critical thinking in our young ones is not just an educational goal; it's a vital investment in their future. 

In this blog, we'll explore the essence of critical thinking skills, its significance for children, and how nurturing this skill can set them up for a successful and fulfilling life.

Table of Content

Understanding critical thinking, why is critical thinking important for children, how critical thinking benefits children in the long run, ways to foster critical thinking in children, the role of education in developing critical thinking, how courses by jetlearn can enhance critical thinking skills, i) definition of critical thinking.

Critical thinking is a cognitive procedure that involves objectively analysing, evaluating, and synthesising information to make a reasoned judgement. 

It includes the capacity to think distinctly and logically, comprehend the logical relationship between concepts, and apply independent thought to evaluate the validity of arguments. 

Critical thinking requires a curious and open-minded approach, allowing individuals to question assumptions, identify biases, and consider alternative perspectives. 

It is a disciplined mode of thinking that allows people to make educated decisions and solve challenges.

ii) Components of Critical Thinking Skills

Critical thinking is a complicated skill made up of numerous critical components, all of which contribute to the overall ability to think deeply and effectively. 

Understanding these components can help individuals develop and refine their critical thinking skills:

1. Analysis ‍

This involves breaking down complex information or problems into smaller, more manageable parts to understand their structure and relationships.

Analytical thinking helps in identifying patterns, distinguishing between facts and opinions, and evaluating the relevance and significance of information.

2. Evaluation

Once the analysis is complete, critical thinkers assess the credibility and reliability of the information. 

This includes scrutinising the sources, examining the evidence, and considering the validity of arguments. 

Evaluation helps in forming well-reasoned judgments and conclusions.

3. Synthesis

This component involves integrating various pieces of information, ideas, or perspectives to form a cohesive understanding or develop innovative solutions. 

Synthesis requires creativity and the ability to see connections between seemingly unrelated elements.

4. Inference

Critical thinkers use inference to draw logical conclusions from the information at hand. 

This involves making deductions, predicting outcomes, and identifying implications based on the available evidence.

5. Explanation

Articulating the reasoning behind conclusions or decisions is a crucial part of critical thinking. 

Clear and coherent explanations help communicate complex ideas effectively and persuasively.

6. Self-regulation

Reflecting on one's own thought processes, biases, and assumptions is essential for effective critical thinking. 

Self-regulation involves monitoring and adjusting one's approach to thinking to ensure objectivity and accuracy.

iii) The Role of Critical Thinking Skills in Problem-solving and Decision-making

Critical thinking skills plays a pivotal role in problem-solving and decision-making, serving as the foundation for effective analysis and judgement. 

Here's how it contributes to these crucial processes:

1. Identifying the Problem

Critical thinking begins with a clear understanding of the problem at hand. It involves questioning assumptions, clarifying ambiguities, and breaking down complex issues into manageable parts.

2. Gathering and Analysing Information

Critical thinkers gather relevant information from reliable sources and analyse it to understand the root causes of the problem. 

They distinguish between facts and opinions, identify biases, and evaluate the credibility of the data.

3. Generating Solutions

With a thorough analysis, critical thinkers brainstorm potential solutions. They think imaginatively, examining several views and options and weighing the benefits and drawbacks of each choice.

4. Making Decisions

Critical thinking skills aids in making informed decisions by evaluating the evidence, assessing the risks and benefits, and considering the short-term and long-term implications of each choice.

5. Implementing Solutions

Once a decision is made, critical thinkers develop a plan to implement the solution. 

They anticipate potential challenges, prepare for contingencies, and adapt their strategies as needed.

6. Evaluating Outcomes

After implementation, critical thinking continues as individuals assess the effectiveness of the solution. 

They reflect on the results, learn from mistakes, and make adjustments for future improvement.

Critical thinking skills for children

Critical thinking skills are crucial for children's development and success, both academically and in their future lives.

Here are several reasons why it's important:

1. Prepares for a Complex World

Today's world is filled with complex issues and rapidly changing information.

Children learn critical thinking skills that allow them to negotiate complexity, analyse information, and make sense of their surroundings.

2. Enhances Academic Performance

Critical thinking skills is fundamental to effective learning. It helps children understand concepts at a deeper level, apply knowledge to new situations, and solve problems creatively, leading to improved academic performance across subjects.

3. Promotes Independence

By developing critical thinking skills, children learn to think for themselves, make their own decisions, and become less reliant on others for answers. This independence fosters confidence and self-reliance.

4. Improves Problem-Solving Skills

Critical thinking skills are essential for effective problem-solving. It enables children to break down problems, evaluate different solutions, and choose the most effective course of action.

5. Encourages Creativity

Critical thinking involves looking at situations from different perspectives and thinking outside the box. This fosters creativity and innovation, essential skills in a rapidly evolving world.

6. Supports Effective Communication

Critical thinkers can articulate their thoughts and arguments clearly and persuasively. This skill is vital for effective communication, collaboration, and leadership.

7. Builds Emotional Intelligence

Critical thinking helps children understand their own emotions and those of others, leading to better emotional regulation and interpersonal relationships.

8. Prepares for Future Careers

Many of the jobs of the future will require strong critical thinking skills.

By developing these skills early, children are better prepared for the demands of the workforce and more likely to succeed in their chosen profession.

Critical thinking is not only an important talent for academic success; it also has long-term benefits that last throughout adulthood. 

Here are some ways in which critical thinking benefits children in the long run:

1. Career Readiness and Adaptability

In today's ever-changing employment environment, businesses prefer people who can think critically, solve complicated problems, and adjust to new environments. 

Children who develop these skills are better prepared for a wide range of careers and are more likely to excel in their chosen professions.

2. Improved Communication and Collaboration Skills

Critical thinking enhances a child's ability to communicate their ideas clearly and listen to others' perspectives. 

This leads to more effective collaboration, an essential skill in both personal and professional settings.

3. Better Decision-Making ‍

As adults, critical thinkers are better able to make informed decisions in their personal and professional lives. 

They can assess the benefits and drawbacks, examine the long-term consequences, and determine the best course of action.

4. Enhanced Problem-Solving Abilities

Critical thinking skills allow individuals to approach problems systematically, analyse information, and develop creative solutions. 

This ability is invaluable in a world where challenges are complex and multifaceted.

5. Increased Creativity and Innovation

Critical thinking encourages individuals to think outside the box and explore new ideas. 

This promotes invention and creativity, which are highly appreciated in numerous sectors and can lead to game-changing developments.

6. Emotional Intelligence and Empathy

Critical thinking helps individuals understand their own emotions and those of others, leading to better emotional regulation and empathy. 

Emotional intelligence is essential for developing good connections and navigating social situations.

7. Lifelong Learning

Critical thinkers are naturally curious and open-minded. They are more inclined to pursue lifelong learning, always expanding their knowledge and skills to adapt to a changing reality.

8. Resilience and Stress Management

Critical thinking can also help individuals handle stress and adversity more effectively. 

They are better equipped to find solutions and maintain emotional balance by approaching challenges with a clear and rational mindset.

kid critical thinking definition

Fostering critical thinking in children is imperative for their cognitive development and lifelong success.  ‍

Here are some effective ways to nurture this important skill:

1. Encourage Curiosity and Questioning

Create an environment in which children feel free to ask questions and explore their curiosity. 

Encourage them to wonder, inquire, and seek answers, fostering a love for learning and critical inquiry.

2. Promote Open-Ended Discussions

Engage children in discussions that require more than yes-or-no answers. 

Encourage them to express their thoughts, provide reasons for their opinions, and listen to different perspectives.

3. Provide Hands-On Learning Experiences

Experiential learning through hands-on activities and experiments helps children understand concepts better and develop critical thinking skills.

Encourage them to explore, experiment, and learn from their experiences.

4. Teach Problem-Solving Strategies

Introduce students to a variety of problem-solving skills, including brainstorming, recognising pros and drawbacks, and breaking down difficult problems into manageable portions. 

Encourage them to apply these strategies in different situations.

5. Encourage Reflection

After completing a task or learning a new concept, encourage children to reflect on their experiences. 

Ask them what they learned, what challenges they faced, and how they could approach things differently in the future.

6. Engage in Coding Activities

Coding is an excellent way to develop critical thinking skills. Encourage children to engage in coding activities, such as creating simple programs, building apps, or designing games. 

Platforms like JetLearn offer courses specifically designed for children to learn coding in a fun and interactive way. 

7. Introduce Critical Thinking Games and Activities

Games and activities that require strategy, logic, and reasoning can be fun ways to develop critical thinking skills. Examples include puzzles, chess, logic games, and brainteasers.

8. Model Critical Thinking ‍

Children learn by example, so demonstrate critical thinking in your own decision-making and problem-solving. 

Discuss your thought process with them, showing how you evaluate information and make reasoned judgments.

9. Encourage Reading and Research

Reading exposes children to new ideas and perspectives, while research helps them learn how to gather and evaluate information. 

Encourage them to read widely and explore topics that interest them.

10. Use Real-Life Scenarios

Apply critical thinking to real-life situations. Ask children how they would handle certain scenarios, encouraging them to think through the consequences of different actions.

11. Foster a Growth Mindset

Encourage children to see challenges as opportunities for growth and learning. 

Teach children that making errors is an integral component of the learning process and that hard work and perseverance are essential for improving their skills.

Education plays an important part in the development of critical thinking since it provides the basis and atmosphere for nurturing this vital ability. 

Here are some key aspects of how education contributes to the development of critical thinking:

1. Curriculum Design ‍

An education system that prioritises critical thinking incorporates it into the curriculum across subjects. 

This means moving beyond rote memorisation to include activities that require analysis, evaluation, and synthesis of information.

2. Teaching Methods

Effective educators use teaching methods that foster critical thinking, such as inquiry-based learning, problem-based learning, and project-based learning. 

These approaches encourage students to ask questions, explore solutions, and engage deeply with the material.

3. Assessment Techniques ‍

Assessments of critical thinking skills, such as open-ended questions, essays, and real-world problem-solving exercises, allow students to showcase their capacity to think critically and reflect on their learning experience.

4. Classroom Environment ‍

A supportive classroom environment that encourages open dialogue, respects diverse perspectives, and promotes intellectual curiosity is essential for developing critical thinking. 

5. Teacher Training

Educators themselves need to be equipped with critical thinking skills and effective teaching strategies. 

Ongoing professional development and training in critical thinking pedagogy are essential for teachers to effectively nurture these skills in their students.

6. Use of Technology ‍

Integrating technology into education can support the development of critical thinking skills. 

Tools such as educational apps, online resources, and interactive platforms can provide engaging and challenging learning experiences.

7. Parental Involvement

Parents play a significant role in developing critical thinking skills at home.

Engaging children in discussions, encouraging questioning, and providing opportunities for independent learning can complement formal education.

8. Lifelong Learning ‍

Education should instil a love for lifelong learning, encouraging students to continuously seek knowledge, question assumptions, and adapt to new challenges.

This mindset is essential for sustaining critical thinking skills throughout life.

kid critical thinking definition

Courses offered by JetLearn are designed to enhance critical thinking abilities in a variety of ways, making them an excellent resource for children's cognitive development. 

Here are some key aspects of how JetLearn's courses contribute to the enhancement of critical thinking:

1. Interactive Learning

JetLearn's classes are interactive and engaging, encouraging learners to actively participate in their learning process. 

This interactive approach fosters curiosity and critical inquiry, essential components of critical thinking.

2. Problem-Solving Focus

Many of JetLearn's courses, especially those related to coding and STEM, emphasise problem-solving. 

Learners are presented with real-world challenges and are guided through the process of devising logical, creative solutions, thereby honing their critical thinking skills.

3. Personalised Learning

JetLearn offers personalised learning paths that cater to each child's unique interests and learning pace. 

This individualised approach allows students to explore topics deeply, ask questions, and develop a nuanced understanding, all of which contribute to critical thinking.

4. Project-based Learning

JetLearn's project-based learning approach gives students the opportunity to work on comprehensive projects that require planning, research, and execution. 

This hands-on experience encourages learners to apply critical thinking skills in a practical context.

5. Collaborative Learning ‍

Some courses at JetLearn involve collaborative projects and discussions, where learners work together and share ideas. 

This collaborative environment promotes the exchange of diverse perspectives, enhancing critical thinking through constructive dialogue and teamwork.

6. Feedback and Reflection

JetLearn provides regular feedback to learners, encouraging them to reflect on their learning process, understand their mistakes, and think about how they can improve. This reflective practice is a key aspect of developing critical thinking skills.

7. Exposure to New Technologies

By offering courses in emerging technologies like artificial intelligence and robotics, JetLearn exposes learners to cutting-edge fields that require analytical thinking and adaptability, further enhancing their critical thinking abilities.

Critical thinking is an indispensable skill that lays the foundation for a child's academic success and future well-being.  ‍

By developing this skill, we provide our children with the tools they need to negotiate the complexities of modern life, make educated decisions, and embrace lifelong learning.  ‍

As parents and educators, it's our responsibility to foster an environment that encourages curiosity, questioning, and open-mindedness.  ‍

By adopting tactics such as coding exercises and enrolling in courses given by platforms such as JetLearn, we can ensure that our children gain the critical thinking abilities required to survive in an ever-changing world.

kid critical thinking definition

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Critical thinking definition

kid critical thinking definition

Critical thinking, as described by Oxford Languages, is the objective analysis and evaluation of an issue in order to form a judgement.

Active and skillful approach, evaluation, assessment, synthesis, and/or evaluation of information obtained from, or made by, observation, knowledge, reflection, acumen or conversation, as a guide to belief and action, requires the critical thinking process, which is why it's often used in education and academics.

Some even may view it as a backbone of modern thought.

However, it's a skill, and skills must be trained and encouraged to be used at its full potential.

People turn up to various approaches in improving their critical thinking, like:

  • Developing technical and problem-solving skills
  • Engaging in more active listening
  • Actively questioning their assumptions and beliefs
  • Seeking out more diversity of thought
  • Opening up their curiosity in an intellectual way etc.

Is critical thinking useful in writing?

Critical thinking can help in planning your paper and making it more concise, but it's not obvious at first. We carefully pinpointed some the questions you should ask yourself when boosting critical thinking in writing:

  • What information should be included?
  • Which information resources should the author look to?
  • What degree of technical knowledge should the report assume its audience has?
  • What is the most effective way to show information?
  • How should the report be organized?
  • How should it be designed?
  • What tone and level of language difficulty should the document have?

Usage of critical thinking comes down not only to the outline of your paper, it also begs the question: How can we use critical thinking solving problems in our writing's topic?

Let's say, you have a Powerpoint on how critical thinking can reduce poverty in the United States. You'll primarily have to define critical thinking for the viewers, as well as use a lot of critical thinking questions and synonyms to get them to be familiar with your methods and start the thinking process behind it.

Are there any services that can help me use more critical thinking?

We understand that it's difficult to learn how to use critical thinking more effectively in just one article, but our service is here to help.

We are a team specializing in writing essays and other assignments for college students and all other types of customers who need a helping hand in its making. We cover a great range of topics, offer perfect quality work, always deliver on time and aim to leave our customers completely satisfied with what they ordered.

The ordering process is fully online, and it goes as follows:

  • Select the topic and the deadline of your essay.
  • Provide us with any details, requirements, statements that should be emphasized or particular parts of the essay writing process you struggle with.
  • Leave the email address, where your completed order will be sent to.
  • Select your prefered payment type, sit back and relax!

With lots of experience on the market, professionally degreed essay writers , online 24/7 customer support and incredibly low prices, you won't find a service offering a better deal than ours.

COMMENTS

  1. How to Teach Your Child to Be a Critical Thinker

    Morin says one way to teach kids to think critically is to teach them how to solve problems. For instance, ask them to brainstorm at least five different ways to solve a particular problem, she says. "You might challenge them to move an object from one side of the room to the other without using their hands," she says.

  2. How to Develop Critical Thinking Skills in Your Kids [in a fun way that

    Here are three examples: ‍. If your child did the multiplication 6 x 9 to get 54 that would NOT be critical thinking. ️But if they then explained to you all the other ways they could get the number 54, then it could be. If your child memorised the lyrics to their favourite song that would NOT be critical thinking.

  3. Critical Thinking Skills for Kids (& How to Teach Them)

    Debates. This is one of those classic critical thinking activities that really prepares kids for the real world. Assign a topic (or let them choose one). Then give kids time to do some research to find good sources that support their point of view. Finally, let the debate begin!

  4. How to Explain Critical Thinking to a Child

    After all, the definition of critical thinking can be complicated for even an adult to understand: It has to do with the process of observing, applying and evaluating information. In other words, critical thinking is how you learn from interpreting and experiencing the world around you. Although the terminology seems daunting at first, there ...

  5. Think About It: Critical Thinking

    Critical thinking: Ask open-ended questions. Asking questions that don't have one right answer encourages children to respond creatively without being afraid of giving the wrong answer. Critical thinking: Categorize and classify. Classification plays an important role in critical thinking because it requires identification and sorting according ...

  6. Critical Thinking for Kids: A Parent's Guide to Skill Development

    Simple Ways to Support Critical Thinking. 1. Model Asking Open-Ended Questions. Demonstrating that you as a grown-up are still curious about the world and asking open-ended questions is a great way to show your kids that processing information and making sense of the world around them is a lifelong endeavor. 2.

  7. Critical thinking is a 21st-century essential

    This is about teaching them to think for themselves. Your role is to direct their questions, listen and respond. Meanwhile, your kids "have to think about how they're going to put this into digestible pieces for you to understand it," says Oshiro. "It's a great way to consolidate learning.". Critical thinking isn't just for the ...

  8. The importance of critical thinking for young children

    Critical thinking. In her book, "Mind in the Making: The seven essential life skills every child needs," author Ellen Galinsky explains the importance of teaching children critical thinking skills. A child's natural curiosity helps lay the foundation for critical thinking. Critical thinking requires us to take in information, analyze it ...

  9. How to teach kids critical thinking

    Firstly, it is a beneficial method to explore the world. If a child learns things using critical thinking, he or she will avoid loads of mistakes and misleadings which could have traumatized him/her. Secondly, this skill makes a mind work faster. When things don't make sense from first sight — think the situation over with a critical ...

  10. Thinking about thinking helps kids learn. How can we teach critical

    The University of Queensland Critical Thinking Project has a number of tools to help teach critical thinking skills. One is a web-based mapping system, now in use in a number of schools and ...

  11. Critical Thinking for Children

    This instructional video was created from the Miniature Guide to Critical Thinking for Children by the Foundation for Critical Thinking. There are 5 Parts to...

  12. Parents' Guide to Critical Thinking: Ages 5-9

    Critical Thinking Development: Ages 5 to 9. Critical thinking must be built from a solid foundation. Although children aged five to nine are not yet ready to take on complicated reasoning or formulate detailed arguments, parents can still help their children lay a foundation for critical thinking. In order to develop high-level critical ...

  13. PDF The Miniature Guide Critical Thinking for Children

    1) decide that you want to be good at thinking. 2) practice using the ideas in this book everyday. Critical thinkers think about their thinking. They look for problems in their thinking. They practice thinking just like players practice basketball or baseball. I hope you decide to be a critical thinker.

  14. How Parents Can Teach Kids Critical Thinking

    Critical thinking, in this sense, need not — and should not — be dry or academic. It can have a significant impact on children's and young adults' emotional lives and their success beyond ...

  15. 10 Awesome Tips for Teaching Critical Thinking Skills

    10. Hold a Q&A session. One way you can figure out how well kids are grasping critical-thinking skills is by holding question-and-answer sessions. Ask a variety of questions one-on-one or in small groups and take note of the levels of thought individual students use regularly and avoid over time.

  16. Critical Thinking for Kids: Games, Questions, Activities, Skills for

    Pay attention to the following attributes that show a student moving from concrete to critical thinking: They approach learning situations with an open mind. They understand that there might be more than one right (or wrong) answer. They look for evidence to support their ideas. They ask questions based upon evidence.

  17. Why Is Developing Critical Thinking Skills Important for Kids?

    Finally, one of the most important practical applications of critical thinking skills is improved literacy, which makes kids more resilient to manipulation, brainwashing, false information, and other dangers that lurk on the internet and in-person in the form of peer pressure, bullying, and more. Kids will have the ability to better analyse the ...

  18. Parents' Guide to Critical Thinking: Ages 13+

    The four basic aspects of critical thinking we examined in the first part of this guide, concerning children aged five to nine, remain relevant, therefore. To review, these were: Critical thinking based on arguing a point. Developing self-esteem, the foundation of critical thinking. Emotional management, a prerequisite for critical thinking.

  19. 6 Ways to Teach Critical Thinking

    How to develop critical thinking. To develop critical thinking, here are 10 ways to practice. Ask probing questions: Ask "why", "how", "what if" to deeply understand issues and reveal assumptions. Examine evidence objectively: Analyze information's relevance, credibility, and adequacy. Consider different viewpoints: Think through ...

  20. 5 Essential Critical Thinking Skills Every Parent Should Teach Their Kids

    Critical thinking skills for kids are essential in developing their ability to analyze information, solve problems, and make informed decisions. ... Problem Identification and Definition. Critical thinking is the ability to objectively analyze information, evaluate arguments, and make reasoned judgments. It is a vital skill in today's world ...

  21. Critikid

    Critical thinking is particularly important for children these days. They spend a huge portion of their lives on the Internet, which abounds in polarizing opinions, logical fallacies, and misinformation. This is the battlefield that the kids of today must withstand, and critical thinking is their armor. Critikid's goal is to help them forge it.

  22. Critical Thinking Skills: Shape A Bright Future for Kids 2024

    Critical thinking skills aids in making informed decisions by evaluating the evidence, assessing the risks and benefits, and considering the short-term and long-term implications of each choice. ‍. 5. Implementing Solutions. Once a decision is made, critical thinkers develop a plan to implement the solution.

  23. Using Critical Thinking in Essays and other Assignments

    Critical thinking, as described by Oxford Languages, is the objective analysis and evaluation of an issue in order to form a judgement. Active and skillful approach, evaluation, assessment, synthesis, and/or evaluation of information obtained from, or made by, observation, knowledge, reflection, acumen or conversation, as a guide to belief and ...