Creative Approaches to Teaching Critical Thinking

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Summary

Creative approaches to teaching critical thinking involve using innovative strategies that actively engage students in analytical, problem-solving, and decision-making processes. These methods prioritize collaboration, creativity, and real-world application to prepare learners for complex challenges.

  • Incorporate hands-on activities: Design lessons that allow students to actively engage with concepts, such as brainstorming sessions, design sprints, or real-world problem-solving exercises, to make learning interactive and collaborative.
  • Empower student involvement: Turn students into co-designers of their learning experience by inviting their input and ideas on how class activities or projects should be structured.
  • Teach through real-world contexts: Use practical scenarios, such as analyzing real datasets or tackling authentic challenges, to encourage students to think critically and develop creative solutions.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Dr. Sabba Quidwai

    Author | Educator | Keynote Speaker | Innovation starts with empathy, and it starts with you. This is your human advantage in an AI world | Former: Apple, Wix, USC

    17,552 followers

    Lately, I’ve been thinking about the gap between how we assess learning, and how we actually think in the real world. And here’s something to consider: Post-its > Blue books. Because if we want students to become critical thinkers in an AI world, we need to make their thinking visible, not just test their recall. I’ve seen how design sprints help make that possible. At some point, I started to connect the dots: The strategies we use in design sprints - rapid idea generation, sorting, moving, deciding aren’t just for innovation teams. They’re exactly what students need to practice real thinking, together. They offer structure for creativity and teach the skills we say we value: ✅ Collaboration ✅ Decision-making ✅ Strategic thinking ✅ Communication When you apply design sprint pratices to lessons, students don’t just sit and “get it.” They sort. They vote. They group. They move. They decide. Above all they are learning real skills they can take with them when they graduate. One of my student teachers joined a workshop I was leading on this at her district. She took the framework back to her classroom and saw an immediate shift. Same content, same kids. But this time, they were engaged, focused, and fully owning their thinking. We don’t need to throw everything out. We need to adapt with intention. And sometimes, that starts with a stack of Post-its and the freedom to move.

  • View profile for John Nash

    I help educators tailor schools via design thinking & AI.

    6,234 followers

    The best way to teach brainstorming? Let students brainstorm your teaching approach. Today, our design thinking class at the University of Kentucky, TEK 300, "Teens and Screens," reached a pivotal moment. With midterms behind us and spring break over, we faced a critical question: How might we structure the remaining weeks to promote deeper understanding rather than just blasting through the steps of our semester-long project? Instead of deciding for our students, we chose to "eat our own dog food"(as they used to say at Apple). (HT Reinhold Steinbeck, charles kerns) We turned our students into users and co-designers through a structured brainwriting session focused on this challenge. The process was beautifully simple: • Students received worksheets with our "How Might We" question and a 3×5 grid • Everyone silently wrote initial ideas (one per box) in the first row • Sheets rotated three times, with each person building on or adding to previous ideas • We ended with a gallery walk and dot-voting to identify the strongest concepts In just 20 minutes, we generated over 50 unique ideas! The winner? Incorporating hands-on, interactive activities in every session that directly connect to that day's learning objectives. The meta-realization? We were already practicing the solution before formally adopting it. The brainwriting exercise itself exemplified exactly what our students told us they wanted more of. My teaching partner Ryan Hargrove immediately began storyboarding how we'll implement this approach, moving us closer to the collaborative learning journey we want to have with our students. We're moving from "Once upon a time..." (not as great as we could be...) to "Students designed..." (active participation), to "Now we really dig learning all this..." Your students already know what they need; your job is to create space for them to tell you. P.S. What teaching approaches have you transformed by inviting your students to become co-designers of their learning experience? #DesignThinking #HigherEducation #TeachingInnovation #BuildingInPublic #StudentCenteredLearning

  • View profile for Faizan Ali

    Established Professor at University of Galway

    14,316 followers

    Over time, my approach to teaching graduate classes has shifted towards creating an environment where students act more like a group of consultants tackling real-world, data-driven problems. Instead of simply following theoretical frameworks, students now dive into real-life datasets, analyze trends, and craft creative solutions. This hands-on method encourages them to think critically and out of the box—steering away from the temptation of copy-pasting from AI tools like ChatGPT. The focus isn’t just on solving problems; it’s about viewing challenges from different perspectives. By engaging with diverse datasets, students learn to approach problems with fresh eyes, ensuring a deeper retention of knowledge. It also makes the learning process more interactive and fun! This week, we focused on conducting data-driven SWOT analyses. Students worked in teams, using multiple datasets to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. Along the way, they developed their soft skills, learned the value of collaboration, and strengthened their ability to work effectively in groups. This approach not only prepares students for real-world consulting roles but also equips them with the skills to think critically, collaborate, and adapt to a rapidly evolving business landscape. #DataDrivenLearning #ConsultingSkills #RealWorldProblems #GraduateEducation #CriticalThinking #OutOfTheBox #SWOTAnalysis #SoftSkillsDevelopment #CollaborativeLearning #FunInTheClassroom #BusinessEducation #InnovationInTeaching #HigherEd

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