TY - JOUR
T1 - Training Higher Education Teachers’ Critical Thinking and Attitudes towards Teaching it
AU - Janssen, EM
AU - Mainhard, T
AU - Buisman, RSM
AU - Verkoeijen, Peter
AU - Heijljtes, AEG
AU - Peppen, Lara
AU - van Gog, Tamara
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Teachers play a crucial role in attaining a major objective of higher education: fostering students’ critical thinking (CT). Yet, little is known about how to foster teachers’ own CT-skills and attitudes towards teaching CT. In a quasi-experimental study (N?=?54), we investigated whether a three-session teacher training on (teaching) CT (n?=?32) positively affected higher education teachers’ CT-skills and their attitudes towards teaching CT compared to a control condition (n?=?22). The training consisted of explicit instruction on common reasoning biases combined with assignments focused on the teaching practice. Results showed that the training improved teachers’ performance on trained but not on novel CT-tasks. Also teachers’ ability to detect biases in a written student product improved; however, despite a small improvement, they still had difficulties in correctly explaining those biases. Possibly due to ceiling effects the training did not affect perceived relevance of teaching CT. Finally, perceived competence in teaching CT decreased temporarily after the first training session but this negative effect disappeared after the final third session. Future research should investigate ways to promote teachers’ ability to transfer trained skills to other CT-tasks, their ability provide feedback on students’ reasoning (i.e., bias explanation), and their attitudes towards teaching CT.
AB - Teachers play a crucial role in attaining a major objective of higher education: fostering students’ critical thinking (CT). Yet, little is known about how to foster teachers’ own CT-skills and attitudes towards teaching CT. In a quasi-experimental study (N?=?54), we investigated whether a three-session teacher training on (teaching) CT (n?=?32) positively affected higher education teachers’ CT-skills and their attitudes towards teaching CT compared to a control condition (n?=?22). The training consisted of explicit instruction on common reasoning biases combined with assignments focused on the teaching practice. Results showed that the training improved teachers’ performance on trained but not on novel CT-tasks. Also teachers’ ability to detect biases in a written student product improved; however, despite a small improvement, they still had difficulties in correctly explaining those biases. Possibly due to ceiling effects the training did not affect perceived relevance of teaching CT. Finally, perceived competence in teaching CT decreased temporarily after the first training session but this negative effect disappeared after the final third session. Future research should investigate ways to promote teachers’ ability to transfer trained skills to other CT-tasks, their ability provide feedback on students’ reasoning (i.e., bias explanation), and their attitudes towards teaching CT.
U2 - 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2019.03.007
DO - 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2019.03.007
M3 - Article
SN - 0361-476X
VL - 58
SP - 310
EP - 322
JO - Contemporary Educational Psychology
JF - Contemporary Educational Psychology
ER -