- [http://www.humboldt.edu/~act/HTML/ Argumentation and Critical Thinking Tutorial] by Dr. Jay VerLinden, Humboldt State University -- "Intended to help students in college level critical thinking classes learn some of the basic concepts of the formal logical structure of arguments and informal fallacies."
- [http://www.insightassessment.com/pdf_files/DEXadobe.PDF The Delphi Report (a.k.a. Critical Thinking: A Statement of Expert Consensus for Purposes of Educational Assessment and Instruction, Executive Summary] by Peter A. Facione, Santa Clara University (pdf)
- [http://www.criticalthinking.org/ The Critical Thinking Community] Resources for teaching critical thinking, including syllabi; library; sponsors seminars and conferences.
- [http://www.kcmetro.cc.mo.us/longview/ctac/corenotes.htm Critical Thinking Core Concepts] from the "Critical Thinking Across the Curriculum" Project, Longview Community College
- [http://www.austhink.org/critical/ "Critical Thinking on the Web"] by Tim van Gelder
- [http://philosophy.hku.hk/think/ Critical Thinking Web] Aims to supplement and improve the teaching of critical thinking in universities in Hong Kong by providing online teaching and learning resources on critical thinking.
- [http://www.insightassessment.com/pdf_files/what&why2006.pdf "Critical Thinking: What It Is and Why It Counts"] by Peter A. Facione (pdf)
- [http://www.churchofcriticalthinking.com/index.shtml The Church of Critical Thinking]
- [http://dusk.org/adam/criticalthinking/ An Introduction to Critical Thinking] by Adam Wiggins
- [http://web.augsburg.edu/~schield/MiloPapers/984StatisticalLiteracy6.pdf "Statistical Literacy: Thinking Critically About Statistics"] Milo Schield, Augsburg College (pdf)
- [http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/crlnews/backissues1998/julyaugust6/teachingundergrads.htm Teaching Undergrads Web Evaluation: A Guide for Library Instruction]. Association of College and Research Libraries
- [http://www.teachercertification.org/teach/evaluation-techniques-of-Internet-resources.php Evaluation Techniques of Internet Resources,] Teacher Certification.org
- [http://www.michaellorenzen.com/eric/critical-thinking.html "Using Critical Thinking To Conduct Effective Searches of Online Resources"] by Sarah K. Brem and Andrea J. Boyes
- [http://www.kcmetro.cc.mo.us/pennvalley/biology/lewis/crithink.htm A General Semantics Perspective on 'Critical Thinking'] by Steven Lewis
- [http://www.citigraphics.net/jenner/djenner/archive/CritiqueAndCriticalThinking.pdf What "Critical" Means in "Critical Thinking"]: Donald Jenner, BMCC/CUNY (pdf)
- [http://www.csicop.org/si/9012/critical-thinking.html A Field Guide to Critical Thinking] by James Lett
=NPOV=
I don't consider myself a NPOV arbitrator by any means. But that's another subject: my philosophy regarding "NPOV, interacting with others to achieve". That's stated in the following section. This section is my philosophy regarding "NPOV, methods to assess and work in the direction of".
Tenets of NPOV:
- proportional representation
- :this is "balance". balance does not mean assuming the conclusion that the sum total will be pov ambiguous; "grey". this is known as the grey fallacy. (this leads to mutually assured delusion) balance means that each piece of info is weighed according to the same criteria, so that if the article where a scale of pieces of info, it would be balanced. for instance, each piece of info is given sace in the article (representation) proportional to its significance, relevancy, etc. piece of info w/the same such measure should be given equal validity, regardless of their "pov". this is how one gives each pov equal validity: one makes a conscious effort to not assess validity on the basis of pov (to not say "this is leftist pov, so its less valid", or "this is rightest pov, so its less valid"). balance not in relation to the assumption of an equal total of pov (the epistemic), regardless of the empirical, but in proportion to the empirical, regardless of pov (the epistemic). That way, the article refers to the real world, not images or feelings (and possibly delusions, as they have no neccessary connection to the empirical world) in people's heads. represent the facts in proportion to their significance and relevance. (see below)
- significance
- "interesting"; informative. this means statistically unexpected. "joe wears shoes" shouldn't be in the article, but "joe does not wear shoes" should. by the same token, "joe does not have 6 fingers" shouldn't be, "joe does have 6 fingers" should, assuming, of course, the given statement is factually accurate.
- important
- not redundant. redundancy is a form of stating things out of proportion. this is a special case of interesting.
- "Articles need to be interesting to attract and keep the attention of readers. For an entry in an encyclopedia, ideas also need to be important. The amount of space they deserve depends on their importance and how many interesting things can be said about them." - from Wikipedia:NPOV_tutorial#Space_and_balance
- relevance
- factual accuracy
- straightforward presentation
- logical simplicity (convolution is a form of evasion and/or distortion)
- avoidance of logical fallacies
i don't consider info favoring one pov or another to be a legitimate objection. legitimate objections would be things like significance and relevancy. if it's not significant or relevant, it's usually because someone was trying to push a pov, and the fact that its insignificant or irrelevant is a form of bias, i.e., putting things out of proportion.
On the other hand, if it's significant, relevant, and accurate, but you still object to it, then you need to re-evaluate your beliefs.
I'm against disputing an article in general, as it amounts to disputing the conclusion of one's interpretation of the article, a.k.a., shooting the messenger. (and putting the cart before the horse)
:-begin rant- Frankly, if one does not dispute the facts or how they add up, but nonetheless disputes what they add up to, that's nothing but stubborn ignorance and denial. the part of their brain that adds what they don't dispute and comes to the conclusion, is the thinking (rational) part . that's what thinking is. The part that denies the conclusion without disputing the premises, that's the non-thinking (irrational) part. Such people need to learn to distinguish between the two and use the thinking part of their brain more often. That's what I mean by shooting the messenger: Such a person is getting angry because they don't like what's being said. They don't realize that regardless of whether or not it is said, it still is. The problem lies not with the messenger, but with the empirical world, and the disputer's refusal to acknowledge the reality, even though they can find no valid argument with which to answer. It's called the "Concrete operational stage" of thinking, and is supposed to happen between the age of 7 and 12. However, since it's been discovered, disturbingly, that only about 40% of people ever use "formal operational" thinking habitually, it is questionable how many people have substantially developed these skills, which would explain a few things. -end rant-
An article should be disputed in its particulars (the style, tone, accuracy, etc. of phrases, sentences, or paragraphs) on the basis of those particulars, on the basis of the relative significance of info included or not included, or the organization of the article. if nothing of this is disputable, and the article is still found to be "failing" in its general impression, it is by no fault of the article. Indeed, if it were by fault of the article, there would be no way to correct this fault, as all the ways in which the article can be modified without violating policy are listed above.
re: Giving equal validity: this is done by adding, not subtracting. if "the other side" doesn't have a "rebuttle", that is no fault of the original side, and no fault of the messenger. if one is to remove things for purposes of conciseness, one removes for purposes of conciseness; that is, one removes the least significant and/or most redundant info (regardless of whether it is critical or supportive of any given POV) an example of this is the recent edit by Kronius, where he removed a rather insignificant paragraph. Not because it was arguably POV, but because it was insignificant. if it was arguably POV and it was significant enough to merit that space in the article on the basis of its significance (irrespective of its POV), then so, likely, does related info supportive of a different pov likely merit space in the article on the basis of its significance (irrespective of its POV). In summary, I agree both with increasing conciseness by subtracting, and with including significant info via the principle of "giving equal validity" which involves adding. I consider them logically independent.
POV fights, be them in their purest form, can't very well manifest themselves as POV fights if progress is to be gained. I'm reminded of childish bickering: "you're stupid. no, you're stupid. no, you're stupid. no, you're stupid..." Ideally, discussions produce somewhat more sophisticated arguments than that, involving critical thinking and regarding proportion, citation, relevancy, etc, everything but "POV" - the productive ones, at least. I'll admit some discussions involve people calling other people POV-mongers and the like, but those discussions don't lead to any changes in the article.
:..."Here's my take: It should do none of the above listed. Instead, we should hold it to a higher standard: We should represent the facts in representative proportion. That each, each fact will be weighted by it's informativeness (that is, unexpectedness), relevancy (that is, hamming distance), and importance (that is, its impact on the empirical world). Each fact will be given space in the article commensurate with that weighted value, so as to maximize the total value of the article.
:This may result in an article very critical of a person, or very flattering to that person, but this is no objection. Balance does not mean creating a completely ambiguous article. A balanced and neutral article may support a certain pov much more than it does another. For instance, an article might support the POV that science if founded on empiricism much more than the POV that science is founded on catholicism, and thereby "creation science", which is totally invalid from an empirical philosophy, as not science. Also would a fundamental principal of science, "falsifiability", overwhelmingly support the "POV" that "creation science" is not science. Yet one could argue, from the logical fallacy that a balanced presentation of the facts results in a POV ambiguous article, that the science article should be rewritten such that the "POV" that "creation science" is science is supported in the science article as much as the "POV" that it is not science.
:I hope my point is made clear by this example. One should not assume the conclusion (such as two given povs being equally supported by the facts), and select facts so as to support that conclusion. One should weigh each fact on the same scale, regardless of what pov's it supports or sheds doubt on, and let the facts, submitted to a candid world, speak for themselves. Kevin Baastalk 00:08, 2005 Apr 8 (UTC) "