Weak critical thinking skills show themselves in very many ways: critical
and costly errors, repeated mistakes, bad decisions, failed systems,
inaction when action is needed, the giving of bad advice, inaccurate
assumptions, the poor design of training programs, the poor evaluation
of educational curricula, the lack of anticipated action
the list is long. Weakness in critical thinking skill results in loss
of opportunities, of financial resources, of relationships, and even
loss of life. There is probably no other attribute more worthy of measure
than critical thinking skills.
| Human reasoning and problem solving
processes are highly complex but not impossible to analyze, measure
and improve. A measure of critical thinking that can profile an
individual's comparative strength in critical thinking skill is
of extreme value for determining a person's capacity to benefit
from training or to succeed in their job. Individual measures of
critical thinking ability (analysis, inference, evaluation, inductive
reasoning and deductive reasoning) provide information about potential
hires and guidance as to where to dedicate programs of improvement
in workers and students. That all educational programs and workplace
training programs must objectively demonstrate that they are effectively
improving critical thinking skill is a powerful argument.
The California Critical
Thinking Skills Test family of measurement tools - called
the "gold standard" of critical thinking tests -- targets
precisely those core cognitive skills which are called upon as
we form reflective, purposeful judgments about what to believe
or what to do. Measuring, exercising and strengthening these skills
improves decision making and problem solving, which is important
only for ... everyone.
For more on critical thinking skills and how they
relate to reflective problem solving and decision making in the
workplace, in education and in everyday life, download your free
copy of "Critical Thinking: What It Is and Why It Counts."
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