Abstract
Critical thinking is gathering and analyzing information to make a rational judgement. To be a acritical thinker, we must understand our own biases, but be open to new ideas and perspectives. During the past few decades, the rise in social media has coincided with the spread of misinformation. As political science faculty, perhaps more than faculty in any other discipline, the responsibility of teaching our students how to distinguish between factual and fake information is taking up more of our time in the classroom. This requires teaching more critical thinking skills and incorporating appropriate assignments into our courses to reinforce those skills. The bottom line is that we can no longer teach the way we used to – it is imperative that our students take ownership of their own learning experience beginning with their first entry into the college classroom.
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Title
Critical Thinking Modules
Description
In 2022 Terry Gilmour (Professor, Midlands College) and her undergraduate students Maria Gonzalez, Faith Lopez, Carlos Torres, and Elizabeth Whitten designed and created these eight individual critical thinking and information literacy active learning modules. Undergraduate students are encouraged to engage with and complete each of these eight modules to help them improve their capacity to critically gather and process information in a political media landscape filled with misinformation.
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