An examination of accessibility and use of critical thinking for minority and disadvantaged students

IF 3.7 2区 教育学 Q1 Social Sciences
Maree J. Davies, Simon Esling, Shengnan Wang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Access to learning about critical thinking has been inequitable for minority students in New Zealand, as identified by Hipkins et al. (2016). Following an intervention program using critical thinking (CT) within dialogical discussions, using the newly developed Street Smarts talk model, the following study focuses on senior secondary students in high and low academic band classes and their teachers’ perceptions. This is to compare the two groups of students’ interactions using the model, their thoughts on critical thinking, and their teachers’ responses to the students’ interactions and comments. The study selected two groups of high- and low-band classes because minority students are often over-represented in low-band classes in New Zealand. A quasi-experimental study was conducted with audio-recorded peer-to-peer group conversations, with 182 students (111 high-band, 71 low-band) in the year 1 dataset and 198 students (97 high-band, 101 low-band) in the year 2 dataset. Post-intervention, semi-structured interviews were conducted with self-selecting students in the high-band (n = 50) and low-band (n= 100) classes, respectively, and all the teachers in the study (n = 7).

Students in both bands recalled three key differences from typical group discussions: The importance of questioning each other, enjoying constructive arguing, and acknowledged that using CT indicators in dialogical discussions helped them shift from surface to deeper thinking conversations. The findings also revealed that students in the low-band classes insisted they would only use CT when in group discussions with friends present due to trust issues. In contrast, the students in high-band classes identified that speaking with unfamiliar others was necessary for hearing diverse views. When the teachers were shown these different, their reactions varied. Some acknowledged the detrimental implications of academic banding, while others believed they could “fix” the problem with pragmatic pedagogical solutions. Teachers also acknowledged that the provocations set for the students in the low-band classes were less academically sophisticated than the topics set for the high-band classes.

对少数群体和弱势学生批判性思维的可及性和使用情况的考察
正如 Hipkins 等人(2016 年)所指出的,在新西兰,少数族裔学生学习批判性思维的机会并不公平。在使用新开发的 "街头智慧"(Street Smarts)谈话模式,在对话讨论中使用批判性思维(CT)进行干预计划之后,以下研究重点关注高学业段和低学业段班级的高中学生及其教师的看法。目的是比较两组学生使用该模式进行互动的情况、他们对批判性思维的看法以及教师对学生互动和评论的回应。研究选择了高分段和低分段班级两组学生,因为在新西兰,少数族裔学生在低分段班级中的比例往往过高。这项准实验研究使用了同伴小组对话录音,一年级数据集有 182 名学生(111 名高分段学生,71 名低分段学生),二年级数据集有 198 名学生(97 名高分段学生,101 名低分段学生)。干预后,分别对高分段(n=50)和低分段(n=100)班级的自选学生以及所有参与研究的教师(n=7)进行了半结构式访谈:两个波段的学生都回忆起了与典型小组讨论的三个主要不同点:相互质疑的重要性、喜欢建设性的争论,并承认在对话讨论中使用 CT 指标有助于他们从表层对话转向深层思维对话。研究结果还显示,由于信任问题,低段班级的学生坚持认为只有在有朋友在场的小组讨论中才会使用 CT。相比之下,高段班级的学生则认为,与不熟悉的人交谈是听取不同意见的必要条件。当教师们看到这些不同的情况时,他们的反应各不相同。一些人承认学业分段的有害影响,而另一些人则认为他们可以用实用的教学方法 "解决 "这个问题。教师们也承认,为低分段班级的学生设置的启发式教学,在学术上不如为高分段班级的学生设置的课题精深。
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来源期刊
Thinking Skills and Creativity
Thinking Skills and Creativity EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
16.20%
发文量
172
审稿时长
76 days
期刊介绍: Thinking Skills and Creativity is a new journal providing a peer-reviewed forum for communication and debate for the community of researchers interested in teaching for thinking and creativity. Papers may represent a variety of theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches and may relate to any age level in a diversity of settings: formal and informal, education and work-based.
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