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Critical Thinking

Critical Thinking

  • A deep understanding of and capacity to apply the elements and processes associated with critical thinking and problem solving. 
  • The ability to acquire, process, interpret, rationalize and critically analyze large volumes of often conflicting information to the point of making an informed decision and taking action in a timely fashion. 

 

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Trading Fairly in Our World
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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An excellent resource from the Eastern Ontario Catholic Curriculum Cooperative. This resource includes an in-depth simulation to place students into the “shoes” of those living in poverty. “This unit will help engage students to actively explore international trade, development and co-operation issues as they pertain to Canada, its trading partners, and the fair trade system.”

Subject:
21st Century Competencies
Education
Elementary Education
Social Studies
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
GAP 6
Lesson
Reading
Simulation
Unit of Study
Author:
Sandra Lutz
Date Added:
03/02/2023
TweenTribune - Articles for kids, middle school, teens from Smithsonian
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A great non-fiction news site with a wide variety of articles written at differentiated Lexile levels.

There are daily quizzes and immediate feedback for students.

The site offers several resources, links and tips for teachers. The critical thinking prompts at the end of each article help spark student discussions and response or reflection opportunities.

Articles are divided into K-4, 5-6, 7-8 and High School.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Primary Source
Reading
Author:
Smithsonian
Date Added:
01/22/2020
Under One Sky
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This resource effectively illustrates the ways in which animals are important to the health and future of the planet. Four lessons demonstrate how human activities, including those related to climate change can result in habitat fragmentation and threaten the viability of entire ecosystems. The resource includes a teacher's guide, background information, student activity pages, videos and extension ideas for individual, group and community action.

Activity One: What’s your View? (1 x 60 minutes)

Teachers set up a 'four corners' activity in which students read a variety of statements concerning animal welfare and decide if they agree or disagree. The class then discusses as a group the importance of animals in sustaining healthy ecosystems and the value of their relationships with humans.

Activity Two: Video (1 x 60 minutes)

Students watch a video called “Why Animals Matter” and complete a short quiz to check their understanding of key concepts raised in the video. A discussion follows on what can be done to make the world a better place for animals. Suggestions for extension activities are included.

Activity Three: Eco-investigation (3 x 60 minutes)

Students go outside to study local biodiversity. Working in groups, they select a 2m square sample site near the school yard and determine the variety of plant, fungi and animal life found. The inventory includes the abiotic characteristics of soil, rocks, water sources as well as any evidence of human disturbance. Students are also asked to take notice of the resources that species need to survive (food, water, cover and space) and how humans have impacted these resources.

Activity Four: Understanding Habitat (3 X 60 minutes)

After a discussion on the inter-dependency of the four core elements of a habitat, the class is invited to brainstorm ideas as to the causes and effects of habitat fragmentation and the importance of wildlife corridors. Students then review a newspaper article describing how habitat fragmentation due to road construction in parts of India has impacted elephant populations. Four groups of students take on the role of stakeholders in a wildlife corridor project for the benefit of these elephants. Groups must develop a persuasive statement to reflect their point of view. Peer evaluation and class discussion follow.

An extension activity suggests students research the habitat requirements of a wild animal, how these needs can be threatened by human disturbance and what solutions should be considered.

Subject:
21st Century Competencies
Education
Elementary Education
English Language Arts
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
GAP 4
GAP 6
Lesson
Author:
International Fund for Animal Welfare
Jan Hannah
Sue Wallace
Nancy Barr
Date Added:
06/02/2023
Universalis Junior
Restricted Use
Copyright Restricted
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Universalis Junior is a French encyclopedia that provide advertisement-free, high-quality information. This resource is appropriate for immersion students in Grades 3 – Grade 8 and core French students in Grade 9 – Grade 12.

Subject:
French
History
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Author:
Regan Gunningham
Elgin Bunston
Date Added:
07/10/2024
Universalis Senior
Restricted Use
Copyright Restricted
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Universalis Senior is a French encyclopedia that provide advertisement-free, high-quality information. This resource is appropriate for immersion students in Grades 9 –Grade 12.

Subject:
French
History
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Author:
Regan Gunningham
Elgin Bunston
Date Added:
07/10/2024
What is Critical Thinking?
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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This resource is made for grade 2 but could be adapted to any grade and any subject.
I wanted the students to know how important the skill of critical thinking is in all areas of study and of life. I developed this lesson and put it in the introductory section of our Distance Moodle course for Grade 2. It is self-contained and could be done in any class, at any time of year.
Throughout the lessons the student will see the critical thinking icon and make the connection.

Subject:
English Language Arts
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Assessment
Date Added:
09/13/2018
What is metacognition? (Exploring the Metacognition Cycle)
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This YouTube Video explores metacognition and the metacognition cycle, which includes:
1. Assess the task/develop a clear picture
2. Evaluate strengths and weaknesses
3. Plan the approach
4. Apply strategies/monitor progress
5. Reflect/adjust approach

Subject:
Education
Material Type:
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Author:
John Spencer
Date Added:
02/08/2021
Woodworking- Bird House
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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Summary: This year I developed 21st Century Competencies through Critical Thinking, Creativity and Collaboration using the Grade 6 Science outcomes on the Diversity of Living Things and PAA Woodworking. The students prepared a poster on a bird of their choice, they gave an oral presentation on their bird, they drew sketches of a bird house, constructed and painted their houses.

Subject:
Science
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Date Added:
09/10/2018
Work Place and Apprenticeship Math 30- What Bank To Use When Starting A Small Business
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
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Work Place and Apprenticeship Math 30- What Bank To Use When Starting A Small Business

In this lesson student will be developing an idea for a possible small business that they would like to start and run. Once they have developed an idea for a business they will have to research what services different financial institutions offered in their area, or the province. Once they have finished seeing what services are out there, students will then have to decide what institution they would like to use, and determine what requirements they need to meet from the bank. Depending on how much time you would like to spend on this you could have students even come up with a loan proposal and a business plan as well. This can be done in partners or the students can work on the alone as well.

Subject:
Math
Workplace and Apprenticeship
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Date Added:
09/06/2018
Would You Rather - Math Style!
Unrestricted Use
Public Domain
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“Would you Rather?” daily math challenges...usually money related.

Copy and paste this URL to give the students a worksheet to help them make and back up their decision.
Worksheet: http://www.wouldyourathermath.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/would-you-rather-11.pdf

Subject:
Math
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Date Added:
11/22/2018
Write-Around Discussion
Read the Fine Print
Educational Use
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What is Write-Around Discussion?
This strategy provides students with opportunity to either activate prior knowledge on a topic or consolidate recently-learned information. This strategy is for use with small groups of students.

Why use it?
To provide students with the opportunity to practice the skills of communication, collaboration, and critical thinking.
To help students consolidate learning of new material by immediate use of the information.
To help students activate prior knowledge on a topic to be discussed in class.
To provide all students in class with an opportunity to demonstrate their understanding of a particular topic.

Subject:
Arts Education
Career & Work Exploration
Education
English Language Arts
Health & Fitness
Health Education
Language Education
Language Education (EAL, ESL)
Math
Practical & Applied Arts
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Provider:
Let's Talk Science
Author:
CurioCity
Date Added:
01/21/2019
YR Media - It's Your Media
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Dynamic site harnesses creative young talent to speak truth to power

"YR Media has strong politically and socially progressive content that will speak to students' interests and inspire them. Yearbook and journalism advisers might model part of their program on YR Media. ...

Check out the DIY guides. These tutorials offer colorful visuals, detailed explanations, and student samples on topics from ethics to writing opinion pieces to social media reporting and more. There has to be at least one idea in these guides that can be incorporated into your curriculum. Media classes from film to journalism to graphic arts can use YR Media's work as a springboard for discussion and then creation. ELA classes can analyze the arguments put forth in articles (especially in the Opinion section), videos, or podcasts. Students could use this analysis to create their responses in a similar or different format. The videos on compelling topics like hate speech, social media influencers, and parental pressure will definitely spark discussion and can be structured in a Socratic seminar or four-corners format. Double-entry journals might be more fitting for student responses on more sensitive subjects, such as deportation, mass shootings, LGBTQ or straight pride, and housing. Health and psychology classes will also find surprisingly suitable content in teen-friendly language on important issues like reproductive health, mental illness, and anxiety. " (Review from Common Sense Media)

Subject:
Business
Communication Media
English Language Arts
Media Studies
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Podcast
Primary Source
Author:
YR
Date Added:
01/22/2020
A Year on a Mink Farm
Only Sharing Permitted
CC BY-ND
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Learn what happens on a mink farm during the course of a year and throughout the various production cycles. Student reflection questions included as a fillable PDF.

Subject:
Agribusiness
Agriculture Production
Agriculture Studies
Biology
Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Author:
Agriculture in the Classroom Canada
Canadian Mink Breeders
Date Added:
05/10/2021
Youth Voices - Their Perspective
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"YourCommonwealth would be an excellent supplement to classroom learning, especially for middle and high school students. With its focus on global current events and social issues, the site is a great resource for students to find out what kids like them consider important and reflect deeply on their own thoughts about the world's big ideas. Exercises and debates can be created around the opinions expressed on YourCommonwealth through text and video.

YourCommonwealth is an international site created by young people for young people who are interested in addressing global concerns such as injustice, poverty, and the environment. On the site, students from the 54 countries of The Commonwealth of Nations submit articles and videos to share their stories, experiences, and opinions. U.S. students can read about global social issues from a personal point of view –- and from someone around their age. Kids will have the opportunity to make up their own minds about pressing topics and, through discussion with parents and peers, learn how to express opinions.

It's organized by continent: Click on Africa and you'll get all the content relating to that area of the world. Young people from all over the world contribute articles and video to the site, which are then posted in a news-like format. By reading articles, kids can view opinions and timely issues from their global peers. Offsite, kids can get involved in Twitter chats and Facebook discussions on “the present, past and future of the planet.”" (Common Sense Media review)

Subject:
History
Science
Social Studies
Material Type:
Primary Source
Author:
YourCommonwealth
Date Added:
01/22/2020