Critical Thinking:
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CRITICAL THINKING
Student’s Name
Institutional Affiliation
Course
Instructor
Date
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CRITICAL THINKING
Critical thinking is applying skill full conceptualizing, synthesizing, analyzing, or
evaluating any information or data given or acquired through experience, observation, reflection,
or reasoning for an action to be accepted. Critical thinking in my daily life plays several roles,
especially when I was in college. I used critical thinking to solve class assignments and avoid
depending on the lecturers. In my profession, as a teacher, I use critical thinking in creating
student's class assignments. However, over the past few days, I encountered a situation whereby
critical thinking was required to solve the problem at hand. As a teacher’s fraternity, the board
requested us to find possible solutions on how to significantly improve students' performance in
our school (Fisher, 2011). Therefore, the problem at hand required the use of critical thinking
skills since the way to success may not significantly be accessed through secondary information
since situations may not be similar. Consequently, the success of our students depended on our
creativity to create competitive skills to support the students.
There are barriers to critical thinking, which involve a lack of knowledge, willingness,
and closed-mindedness. Lacking knowledge means that an individual does not know exactly how
to apply critical thinking skills. Willingness is a barrier to critical thinking since thinking
critically does not necessarily depend on how skilled an individual is but the willingness to think
critically. Close-mindedness is another significant barrier to critical thinking since it requires that
a person be open-minded and welcome ideas. I had encountered the three barriers of critical
thinking, whereby first is when I entered into a disagreement with my colleague over the student
policies. However, I did know exactly how to apply the skills to solve the conflict. On the
willingness, part is that I once was elected as the leader of a student welfare body in an
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institution. Still, his willingness to solve the student's problems is what led me to perform poorly
due to not applying critical thinking skills to sustain the position or perform better.
Additionally, close-mindedness occurred when I fixed problems into a structured way of
solving problems as a student welfare leader. Additionally, I can place myself on level two of
cognitive development, which is relativism. The reason for placing myself in the relativism stage
is because I believe that there are reasons to solutions of a particular problem and viewed under a
particular context. Significantly, to move to the last stage of commitments requires that I earn
specifically through personal experience to aid my judgments and conclusions (King, 1978).
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References
Fisher, A. (2011). Critical thinking: An introduction. Cambridge university press.
https://books.google.co.ke/books?hl=en&lr=&id=wMhBQ0WdjF4C&oi=fnd&pg=PR1&
dq=critical+thinking&ots=q34oswTPOW&sig=X9RtVybuoRjfAGtLVd25SWlucuA&red
ir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=critical%20thinking&f=false
King, P. M. (1978). William Perry's theory of intellectual and ethical development. New
directions for student services, 1978(4), 35-51.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ss.37119780405