Effect of Critical Thinking Education on Epistemically Unwarranted Beliefs in College Students

被引:36
|
作者
Dyer, Kathleen D. [1 ]
Hall, Raymond E. [2 ]
机构
[1] Calif State Univ Fresno, Dept Child & Family Sci, 5300 N Campus Dr,M-S FF12, Fresno, CA 93740 USA
[2] Calif State Univ Fresno, Dept Phys, Fresno, CA 93740 USA
关键词
Critical thinking; Pseudoscience; General education; Epistemically unwarranted beliefs; Evaluation; Educational outcomes; PARANORMAL BELIEF; PSEUDOSCIENCE; SCIENCE; SKILLS;
D O I
10.1007/s11162-018-9513-3
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The degree to which students hold epistemically unwarranted beliefs, beliefs not founded on reliable reasoning or credible data, can be used as a measure of critical thinking skills. To this end, college students (n = 806) were surveyed at the beginning and end of a semester. Epistemically unwarranted beliefs were pervasive. Several sections of a critical thinking class that specifically and directly addressed pseudoscience, taught by three different instructors, produced a large and significant reduction of those beliefs, but research methods classes and unrelated general education classes did not. Most likely to be reduced were beliefs in health pseudoscience and extraordinary life forms. Conspiracy theories were least likely to change. Demographic variables (gender, race, SES) were associated with beliefs at pre-test, but not related to reduction of belief as a result of the class. Similarly, academic indicators that suggest intelligence were related to belief at pre-test, but not change. The one exception was that reduction of belief in health pseudoscience was widespread in all groups at pre-test, but showed the greatest reduction among students with indicators of academic aptitude and achievement. We conclude that the educational approach of directly addressing pseudoscience is effective for changing beliefs, not just increasing knowledge, and that it works for most college students, not just a select subset.
引用
收藏
页码:293 / 314
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effect of Critical Thinking Education on Epistemically Unwarranted Beliefs in College Students
    Kathleen D. Dyer
    Raymond E. Hall
    [J]. Research in Higher Education, 2019, 60 : 293 - 314
  • [2] EFFECT OF A CRITICAL THINKING PROGRAM ON DEVELOPING COLLEGE STUDENTS' CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS
    Alwehaibi, Huda Umar
    [J]. EDULEARN11: 3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION AND NEW LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES, 2011, : 6386 - 6397
  • [3] Critical Thinking is Epistemically Responsible
    Ritola, Juho
    [J]. METAPHILOSOPHY, 2012, 43 (05) : 659 - 678
  • [4] Is critical thinking epistemically responsible?
    Huemer, M
    [J]. METAPHILOSOPHY, 2005, 36 (04) : 522 - 531
  • [5] Critical thinking in higher education: perspectives of Chinese college students
    路欣
    刘明辉
    [J]. 校园英语, 2019, (15) : 67 - 67
  • [6] Popular epistemically unwarranted beliefs inventory (PEUBI): A psychometric instrument for assessing paranormal, pseudoscientific and conspiracy beliefs
    Huete-Perez, Daniel
    Morales-Vives, Fabia
    Gavilan, Jose M.
    Boada, Roger
    Haro, Juan
    [J]. APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 36 (06) : 1260 - 1276
  • [7] Epistemic beliefs and critical thinking of Chinese students
    Chan, Ngai-Man
    Ho, Irene T.
    Ku, Kelly Y. L.
    [J]. LEARNING AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2011, 21 (01) : 67 - 77
  • [8] Critical Thinking Intention of Physical Education on College Students in CSP-TPECTS
    Cheng, Chia Hui
    Liao, Li-an
    Lin, Hsiu-Chu
    Chiang, Ta-Hsin
    Teng, Jui-Yi
    [J]. RESEARCH QUARTERLY FOR EXERCISE AND SPORT, 2011, 82 (01) : A36 - A36
  • [9] The Effect of Critical Thinking and Self-Efficacy on College Students Engagement
    Wijaya, Hariz Enggar
    Qudsyi, Hazhira
    Nurendra, Annisaa Miranty
    Rachmawati, Mira Aliza
    [J]. ADVANCED SCIENCE LETTERS, 2018, 24 (01) : 163 - 165
  • [10] Individual differences in visual word recognition: the role of epistemically unwarranted beliefs on affective processing and signal detection
    Huete-Perez, Daniel
    Ferre, Pilar
    [J]. LANGUAGE AND COGNITION, 2023, 15 (02) : 314 - 336