This article was originally published at The Conversation.
Many teachers say they strive to teach their students to be critical thinkers. They even pride themselves on it; after all, who wants children to just take in knowledge passively?
But there is a problem with this widespread belief. The truth is that you can’t teach people to be critical unless you are critical yourself. This involves more than asking young people to “look critically” at something, as if criticism was a mechanical task.
As a teacher, you have to have a critical spirit. This does not mean moaning endlessly about education policies you dislike or telling students what they should think. It means first and foremost that you are capable of engaging in deep conversation. This means debate and discussion based on considerable knowledge – something that is almost entirely absent in the educational world. It also has to take place in public, with parents and others who are not teachers, not just in the classroom or staffroom.
The need for teachers to engage in this kind of deep conversation has been forgotten, because they think that being critical is a skill. But the Australian philosopher John Passmore criticised this idea nearly half a century ago:
If being critical consisted simply in the application of a skill then it could in principle be taught by teachers who never engaged in it except as a game or defensive device, somewhat as a crack rifle shot who happened to be a pacifist might nevertheless be able to teach rifle-shooting to soldiers. But in fact being critical can be taught only by men who can themselves freely partake in critical discussion.
The misuses of ‘criticism’
The misuse of the idea of “criticism” first became clear to me when I gave a talk about critical thinking to a large group of first-year students. One student said that the lecturers she most disliked were the ones who banged on about the importance of being critical. She longed for one of them to assert or say something, so she could learn from them and perhaps challenge what they say.The idea that critical thinking is a skill is the first of three popular, but false views that all do disservice to the idea of being critical. They also allow many teachers to believe they are critical thinkers when they are the opposite:
-
“Critical thinking” is a skill. No it is not. At best this view
reduces criticism to second-rate or elementary instruction in informal
and some formal logic. It is usually second-rate logic and poor
philosophy offered in bite-sized nuggets. Seen as a skill, critical
thinking can also mean subjection to the conformism of an ideological
yoke. If a feminist or Marxist teacher demands a certain perspective be
adopted this may seem like it is “criticism” or acquiring a “critical
perspective”, but it is actually a training in feminism or Marxism which
could be done through tick box techniques. It almost acquires the
character of a mental drill.
-
“Critical thinking” means indoctrination. When teachers talk about
the need to be “critical” they often mean instead that students must
“conform”. It is often actually teaching students to be “critical” of
their unacceptable ideas and adopt the right ones. Having to support
multiculturalism and diversity are the most common of the “correct
ideas” that everyone has to adopt. Professional programmes in education,
nursing, social work and others often promote this sort of “criticism”.
It used to be called “indoctrination”.
-
“Critical theories” are “uncritical theories”. When some theory has
the prefix “critical” it requires the uncritical acceptance of a certain
political perspective. Critical theory, critical race theory, critical
race philosophy, critical realism, critical reflective practice all
explicitly have political aims.
What is criticism?
Criticism, according to Victorian cultural critic Matthew Arnold, is a disinterested endeavour to learn and propagate the best that is known and thought in the world. We should all be as “bound” by that definition as he was. We need only to teach the best that is known and thought and “criticism” will take care of itself. That is a lesson from 100 years ago that every teacher should learn.Elliott & Fry, via Wikimedia Commons
Critical thinking seen as Arnold defined it is more like a character trait – like having “a critical spirit”, or a willingness to engage in the “give and take of critical discussion”. Criticism is always about the world and not about you.
The philosopher most associated with the critical spirit is Socrates. In the 1930s, another Australian philosopher John Anderson put the Socratic view of education most clearly when he wrote: “The Socratic education begins … with the awakening of the mind to the need for criticism, to the uncertainty of the principles by which it supposed itself to be guided.”
But when I discuss Socratic criticism with teachers and teacher trainers I miss out Anderson’s mention of the word “uncertainty”. This is because many teachers will assume that this “uncertainty” means questioning those bad ideas you have and conforming to an agreed version of events, or an agreed theory.
Becoming a truly critical thinker is more difficult today because so many people want to be a Socrates. But Socrates only sought knowledge and to be a Socrates today means putting knowledge first.