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Helping Students Learn to Reason

Page 1

Helping Students Learn to Reason

What do we expect our students to be able to do intellectually, physically, or emotionally as a result of taking our courses? What kind of sustained and substantial difference can we make in the way they think and act? Furthermore, how can we best help and encourage them to achieve certain reasoning abilities, answer certain questions, develop particular intellectual habits or perspectives? How and what can we know about their progress in doing any of these things? How will we evaluate them? How will we evaluate our efforts to help and encourage them to learn? In recent months I have wrestled with these questions and have discovered that answers do not come easily. We are too accustomed to speaking about what we plan to do in a course, too comfortable with seldom articulated assumptions about what students should be able to do intellectually, and too familiar with the vague little phrases that often litter our discussions of learning objectives


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Helping Students Learn to Reason by Jeff Palmer - Issuu