1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Natasha2012 [34]
3 years ago
9

gets BRAINILIST pls help need major help litarlly crying for help pls help me pls It question 11 of critical thinking 6th of 1.1

3 learner path conclusion quiz anyone pls help i need this question done in like 15 mins .You learned a lot about preparing for tests in this path. What habits have you changed as a result of what you have learned? Give at least one specific example. How do you see this change as a benefit for your future test preparation? Your answer should be at least three to five complete sentences.
Biology
1 answer:
Dmitry_Shevchenko [17]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

In this interview for Think magazine (April ’’92), Richard Paul provides a quick overview of critical thinking and the issues surrounding it: defining it, common mistakes in assessing it, its relation to communication skills, self-esteem, collaborative learning, motivation, curiosity, job skills for the future, national standards, and assessment strategies.

Question: Critical thinking is essential to effective learning and productive living. Would you share your definition of critical thinking?

Paul: First, since critical thinking can be defined in a number of different ways consistent with each other, we should not put a lot of weight on any one definition. Definitions are at best scaffolding for the mind. With this qualification in mind, here is a bit of scaffolding: critical thinking is thinking about your thinking while you’re thinking in order to make your thinking better. Two things are crucial:

1) critical thinking is not just thinking, but thinking which entails self-improvement

2) this improvement comes from skill in using standards by which one appropriately assesses thinking. To put it briefly, it is self-improvement (in thinking) through standards (that assess thinking).

To think well is to impose discipline and restraint on our thinking-by means of intellectual standards — in order to raise our thinking to a level of "perfection" or quality that is not natural or likely in undisciplined, spontaneous thought. The dimension of critical thinking least understood is that of  "intellectual standards." Most teachers were not taught how to assess thinking through standards; indeed, often the thinking of teachers themselves is very "undisciplined" and reflects a lack of internalized intellectual standards.

Question: Could you give me an example?

Paul: Certainly, one of the most important distinctions that teachers need to routinely make, and which takes disciplined thinking to make, is that between reasoning and subjective reaction.

If we are trying to foster quality thinking, we don't want students simply to assert things; we want them to try to reason things out on the basis of evidence and good reasons. Often, teachers are unclear about this basic difference. Many teachers are apt to take student writing or speech which is fluent and witty or glib and amusing as good thinking. They are often unclear about the constituents of good reasoning. Hence, even though a student may just be asserting things, not reasoning things out at all, if she is doing so with vivacity and flamboyance, teachers are apt to take this to be equivalent to good reasoning.

This was made clear in a recent California state-wide writing assessment in which teachers and testers applauded a student essay, which they said illustrated "exceptional achievement" in reasoned evaluation, an essay that contained no reasoning at all, that was nothing more than one subjective reaction after another. (See "Why Students-and Teachers-Don't Reason Well")

The assessing teachers and testers did not notice that the student failed to respond to the directions, did not support his judgment with reasons and evidence, did not consider possible criteria on which to base his judgment, did not analyze the subject in the light of the criteria, and did not select evidence that clearly supported his judgment. Instead the student:

Explanation: I have had this one before.

You might be interested in
When igneous rock is formed,the size of the rock crystals or grains is primarily dependent on
Vedmedyk [2.9K]

Answer:

The three factors that influence the textures of igneous rocks are the speed of cooling, the silicate content, and the water content.

Igneous rocks contain randomly arranged interlocking crystals. The size of the crystals depends on how quickly the molten magma solidified: magma that cools slowly will form an igneous rock with large crystals. lava that cools quickly will form an igneous rock with small crystals. When magma cools, crystals form because the solution is super-saturated with respect to some minerals. If the magma cools quickly, the crystals do not have much time to form, so they are very small. If the magma cools slowly, then the crystals have enough time to grow and become large.

3 0
2 years ago
Which of the following describes a properly controlled experiment?
netineya [11]

Answer:

Option D, Five radish plants are grown in sunlight, while another five radish plants are kept in the dark.

Explanation:

In a controlled experiment, impact of one independent variable is studied on the dependent variable.  

Here in this study sunlight is the independent variable while the radish plant is dependent variable.  

The researcher wants to study the effect of sunlight on radish plants when they are exposed to it   and compare it to the effect created on radish plants  that are kept in dark.  

Hence option D is correct.

3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
A Venus flytrap captures insects by responding to which type of stimulus? *
Neko [114]

Answer:

touch

Explanation:

When the fly lands on the Venus flytrap receptors send a signal to the "brain" of the plant then the mouth chomps down

5 0
3 years ago
What is the difference between an embryo and a fetus?
Ksivusya [100]
A embryo is the unborn child from when they were conceived to 10 weeks and fetus is the unborn child from 11 weeks till birth
5 0
3 years ago
What organelle in plant cells contains chlorophyll and makes food from sunlight? ​
Alchen [17]
The answer is chloroplasts
8 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • Here are a list of events that involve changes to genotype and phenotype. Arrange these events in sequential order, from first t
    9·1 answer
  • How is the activity of a riboswitch controlled? metabolite binding can change its structure?
    7·1 answer
  • How is cytoskeleton like your skeleton
    6·1 answer
  • Explain how the oraginsms would be affected if the snail population died out
    12·1 answer
  • Blank ....is a simple cell type without a true nucleus
    11·2 answers
  • If enough changes occur in the gene pool of a species, it is possible that a new species would be created.
    15·1 answer
  • Why is geology the most important science?
    14·2 answers
  • What is thermometric property<br> ...?
    9·1 answer
  • Write the general characteristics of bryophytes?​
    9·2 answers
  • Using the cross shown in the video, what percentage of the offspring are
    11·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!