Nippold Marilyn A, LaFavre Scott, Shinham Kristin
Communication Disorders and Sciences Program, University of Oregon, Eugene.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2020 Apr 27;63(4):1212-1226. doi: 10.1044/2019_JSLHR-19-00168. Epub 2020 Apr 14.
Purpose Critical thinking pervades formal educational benchmarks in the United States, including the Common Core State Standards. However, little information is available on how it develops. Hence, the primary purpose of this study was to examine the development of critical thinking in adolescents using a written language-sampling task. We also examined related aspects of development: verbal productivity, syntactic complexity, and metacognitive verb use. Method The participants included two groups of adolescents, aged 13 and 16 years ( = 40 per group). All testing took place in classrooms at a middle school or high school. Participants read four fables by the Greek storyteller Aesop (circa 620-560 B.C.) and explained in writing why they agreed or disagreed with the moral message of each story. To examine critical thinking, we evaluated their explanations using a unique 0- to 4-point scoring system. We also examined each participant's transcript for verbal productivity, syntactic complexity, and metacognitive verb use. Results On the critical thinking task, the 16-year-olds outperformed the 13-year-olds, providing explanations that were more elaborate and detailed. However, there were many individual differences within groups, and even the older group did not consistently perform at the highest level, indicating that critical thinking is a late-developing ability. Age-related gains also occurred on verbal productivity and metacognitive verb use but not on syntactic complexity. Conclusion Information gleaned from this study demonstrates how critical thinking develops during adolescence but remains incomplete. The study also has implications for assessing critical thinking in adolescents and knowing how to prompt complex language and thought. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.12100989.
目的 批判性思维在美国的正式教育基准中普遍存在,包括《共同核心州立标准》。然而,关于其如何发展的信息却很少。因此,本研究的主要目的是通过一项书面语言抽样任务来考察青少年批判性思维的发展。我们还考察了相关的发展方面:语言产出、句法复杂性和元认知动词的使用。方法 参与者包括两组青少年,年龄分别为13岁和16岁(每组n = 40)。所有测试均在一所初中或高中的教室中进行。参与者阅读了希腊故事讲述者伊索(约公元前620 - 560年)的四则寓言,并书面解释他们为什么同意或不同意每个故事的道德寓意。为了考察批判性思维,我们使用一种独特的0至4分评分系统对他们的解释进行评估。我们还检查了每位参与者的文字记录,以了解语言产出、句法复杂性和元认知动词的使用情况。结果 在批判性思维任务中,16岁的青少年表现优于13岁的青少年,他们给出的解释更详尽、更具体。然而,组内存在许多个体差异,即使是年龄较大的组也并非始终表现出最高水平,这表明批判性思维是一种发展较晚的能力。在语言产出和元认知动词的使用方面也出现了与年龄相关的进步,但在句法复杂性方面没有。结论 从本研究中收集到的信息表明了批判性思维在青少年时期是如何发展的,但仍不完整。该研究对于评估青少年的批判性思维以及了解如何激发复杂的语言和思维也具有启示意义。补充材料 https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.12100989