Nature of Thinking

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Excerpted from Frameworks for Thinking: A Handbook for Teaching and Learning by David Moseley,

Vivienne Baumfield, Julian Elliott, Maggie Gregson, Steven Higgins, Jen Miller, Douglas P. Newton.
Cambridge University Press, 2005, pp. 10 – 19.

What is thinking?
Trying to understand how people think and learn is in some ways an impossible
challenge, since we can only try to understand these things by using the very processes
that we do not fully understand. In such circumstances, choices are available. We can
choose to focus on measureable aspects of human behaviour rather than on lived
experience; or we can resort to metaphors which have personal or group appeal; or we
can do what scientists have often done when entering a new and complex field – look for
patterns and regularities between situations.
Dewey’s (1933) classic introduction to “How We Think” offers an overview of some of
the different senses in which the term thinking is used:
• Thinking as a “stream of consciousness” and the everyday “uncontrolled
coursing of ideas through our heads”, including dreaming and daydreams (p. 3)
• Thinking as an imagination or mindfulness which is “usually restricted to things
not directly perceived” since we tend to say “I saw a tree” rather than “I thought
I saw a tree” if we are actually standing with our eyes open in front of one (p. 5)
• Thinking as synonymous with believing expressed in statements such as “I think it
is going to rain tomorrow”: in this sense it is contrasted with knowledge and the
level of confidence with which we express such a belief (p. 6)
• Reflective thinking as a chain of thought leading, through enquiry, to a conclusion
(p.9): this, of course is Dewey’s aim in defining and recommending reflective
thinking as the basis of both rationality and action.
It is hard to disentangle each of these various senses. What we can say is that the word
“thinking,” particularly in educational contexts, is usually used to mean goal-directed
process, such as remembering, forming concepts, planning what to do and say, imagining
situations, reasoning, solving problems, considering opinions, making decisions and
judgments, and generating new perspectives. When there is some uncertainty that a
satisfactory end is achievable, it is useful to think.
The issue here is control. In Dewey’s view, the development of reflective thought is the
most important goal of education and enables the individual to take control of and
responsibility for their own thinking in order to participate effectively as a member of a
democratic society. Paradoxically, it is the teacher’s role to develop this thinking: in
various frameworks for thinking, the roles of the teacher and the roles of the learner are
not always made explicit. In some, the role of the teacher is to ensure more effective
planning, delivery or assessment of the curriculum, but without the explicit and active
engagement of the learner ... . In others, the role of the learner is acknowledged as central
to this task.


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Both the philosophy and sociology of education have wrestled with the problems of
indoctrination and empowerment. Contemporary work in psychology of education has
identified the role of metacognition and self-regulation as of crucial importance. We see
the apparently competing disciplines as offering complementary perspectives which are
of value to learners and educators.
There is considerable debate about the meaning of the term “metacognition” in the
research literature. Perry (1970) spoke about “meta-reason” and “meta-thought,” but the
coining of the term “metacognition” is usually attributed to Flavell (1976):
Metacognition refers to one’s knowledge concerning one’s own cognitive processes and
products or anything related to them… For example, I am engaging in metacognition
(meta-memory, meta-learning, meta-attention, meta-language, or whatever) if I notice
that I am having more trouble learning A than B; if it strikes me that I should double-
check C before accepting it as a fact… if I sense that I had better make a note of D
because I may forget it… Metacognition refers, among other things, to the active
monitoring and consequent regulation and orchestration of these processes… usually in
the service of some concrete goal or objective (Flavell, 1976, p. 232).
As one might anticipate, many classroom interventions, based upon theories of self-
regulation, emphasize the importance of helping students to develop a positive orientation
to learning and a belief that they are capable of succeeding if they work hard and apply
appropriate strategies.

Psychological perspectives
Since the pioneering work of Bloom and his associates (1956), psychologists and
educationalists have sought to conceptualize a multitude of cognitive processes as a
means of improving teaching, learning and assessment. However, it is only during the
past decade that the huge interest in the teaching of thinking has seen such work
proliferate in everyday educational practices. Many initiatives originate from Western
psychology and education, particularly the US and the UK. Various reasons have been
adduced, such as relatively poor performance on international comparisons of educational
attainment and a recognition that mature economies require more sophisticated learners
and problem-solvers. This has led to a search for new curricula and pedagogies that will
stimulate more productive thinking. However, interest in cognitive enhancement has
become a worldwide phenomenon. Many countries performing low on international
measures of performance, such as South Africa, see the teaching of thinking as a valuable
means of raising educational levels and developing social inclusion. Others, in countries
that appear to be high-achieving on such traditional measures, such as Singapore and
China, believe that such approaches may address students’ limited creative and problem-
solving abilities in order to develop better productivity in the global economy.
Cognitive psychologists typically study thinking in other people – a third-person
perspective in which the metaphor of the brain as a computer has been dominant. In this
view, the higher levels of the brain make a model of the actual world, a mental picture


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that parallels the world, though no doubt with distortions (Craik, 1943; Zangwill, 1980;
Nathan, 1987). Thinking is an internal, mental process that constructs and operates on
mental representations of information. Thagard describes six approaches to modeling the
mind, involving: logic, rules, concepts, analogies, images, and neural connections
(Thagard, 1996, p. 19). Thagard writes that “thinking can best be understood in terms of
representational structures in the mind and computational procedures that operate on
those structures … There is much disagreement about the nature of the representations
and computations that constitute thinking” (p. 10). Thagard draws an analogy between
the mind and a computer program, where the mental representations in the mind are like
the organization of stored data and the algorithms that are then executed by the software
correspond to the thinking procedures in the mind. Seductive though this analogy may
be, it does not capture some of the complexity, and particularly, the quality of thinking
that can be described by and individual. First-person introspective accounts of thinking
have a different feel about them, since we all have the impression that we can consciously
control our thought and actions. We experience wanting, will, effort, and emotion in a
holistic manner as we think, and it is only through subsequent analytical reflection that
we can view these aspects dispassionately and identify some patterns or regularities in
our experience.
Indeed a case can be made that while we are thinking (with our attention focused on
certain elements) we are not aware of the thinking process itself (much of it is
unconscious). It is only after the event that we can reflect on the products of our thinking
and to a certain extent reconstruct and analyze the process. Like Velmans (2000), we
take the view that first-person and third-person accounts of thinking are complementary
and that one cannot be reduced to the other.
A teacher necessarily has a third-person perspective on the learner’s thinking and can
only make inferences about it on the basis of what the learner does. Some earlier
approaches to instructional design have focused on precisely formulated, externally-
imposed behavioural objectives in place of goals which learners set for themselves or
agree with others. First-person goal setting may be desirable in some contexts and with
certain types of content, whereas group negotiation of goals may be preferred in other
contexts and teacher or other externally-driven instruction may be most effective in yet
other contexts, particularly where masterly learning and accurate performance is
expected. This argument applies just as much to the development of thinking skills as to
any kind of learning.

Sociological perspectives
Thinking always takes place in a context which has social influences and interactions
whether direct or indirect, and the individual’s thinking is affected by the various
affordances and constraints of different contexts. [Participating in different contexts] is
of course a complex and reciprocal relationship where the individual “acts back” (Jarvis,
1992) on the social:


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When children are born, they are born into a society whose culture preceded them and
will almost certainly continue after their lives are over. Culture therefore appears to be
objective and external. But the children have inherited no, or minimal, instincts to help
them live within society and conform to its culture; thus they have to acquire that culture.
In the first instance, then, learning is a matter of internalizing and transforming
something that is apparently objective to the individual … However, there comes a time
when they begin to think for themselves, ask questions and generally experiment …
Children gradually become more independent; they usually develop a mind of their own
and then process the external cultural stimuli and respond to them in a variety of ways.
Individuals begin to act back on the social world that has formed them (Jarvis, 1992, pp.
22-23).
Awareness of aspects of thinking which can be applied in different contexts may be of
benefit to learners who can see that aspects of their own experience may be relevant in a
new situation.

Philosophical perspectives
A number of philosophical issues have a bearing upon the aspects of thinking and
learning. In particular, aspects of epistemology, the philosophy of mind, the philosophy
of language and related theories of meaning are relevant to an understanding of the way
we think, know, and learn. Educational philosophy has tended to view these issues in
terms of learning to know or the development of knowledge: a genetic perspective. In
contemporary educational philosophy, the most pertinent debate is how general aspects of
thinking can be identified in different contexts. On one side of the debate, proponents of
thinking skills, such as Ennis (1989, 1991) argue that there are important general thinking
skills (or general critical thinking skills) than can be used or applied across different
contexts. On the other, those like McPeck (1981) argue that thinking is always context
specific.


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