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What Does It Mean To Be Human? A Historical Perspective 1800-2011 | Brain Pickings
"Ultimately, What It Means to Be Human is less an answer than it is an invitation to a series of questions, questions about who and what we are as a species, as souls, and as nodes in a larger complex ecosystem of sentient beings. As Bourke poetically puts it, Erasing the awe-inspiring variety of sentient life impoverishes all our lives.” And whether this lens applies to animals or social stereotypes, one thing is certain: At a time when the need to celebrate both our shared humanity and our meaningful differences is all the more painfully evident, the question of what makes us human becomes not one of philosophy alone but also of politics, justice, identity, and every fiber of existence that lies between."
Thursday, May 24, 2012
What Does It Mean To Be Human? A Historical Perspective 1800-2011 | Brain Pickings
Critical Thinking | TechNyou
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Nice site with several resources including a ppt slide show on crtitical thinking and a series of two-minute animated videos on aspects of critical thinking.
tags: elpcrithnk
Thursday, April 26, 2012
TED-Ed | Lessons Worth Sharing
A new TED site with educational material and accompanying lessons. Teachers can customize the lessons and use the site to create their own lessons for any TEd or YouTube video content. This could be very useful in our Research Writing courses among others
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Coursera.org
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This is a good looking site for high-quality on-line courses. It might be interesting to get a group of ICU studnts to take one of these courses with the ELA providing English language support.
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tags: oer
Tuesday, April 03, 2012
stunlaw: Computational Thinking: Some thoughts about Abduction
Article exploring the importance of a triad of induction, deduction and abduction, and the importance of the latter in computational thinking. Could be useful in explaining hypothesis formation as part of critical thinking.
http://stunlaw.blogspot.ca/2012/03/computational-thinking-some-thoughts.html
Friday, March 02, 2012
How Leaders Lose Their Luck - Anthony Tjan - Harvard Business Review
Good list of leadership qualities that are hardest to achieve and maintain
How Leaders Lose Their Luck - Anthony Tjan - Harvard Business Review
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tags: leadership
Friday, February 17, 2012
Blog posting related to complexity and learning and critical thinking.
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I am currently reading Morin's On Complexity, and find this blog posting very helpful.
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Communications & Society: Complexity and Personal Learning Environments
The problem, of course, is that we don't have much language yet to talk intelligently about this kind of complexity. Our notions of critical thinking (interpretation, analysis, evaluation, inference, explanation, self-regulation, and so on) are all pretty much individual mental exercises aimed at reducing complexity to simple clarity. We need new ways to examine and think about complex, rhizomatic structures. Morin mentions three ways to think, or principles, that help us approach the complex: a dialogic principle (dia-logic), the principle of organizational recursion, and the holographic principle (by which I think he means what I would call fractal). Deleuze and Guattari mention cartography and decalcomania. I was pleased in our Elluminate session yesterday (Wed, 2010 Oct 06) when George Siemens spoke about mapping learning and knowledge to real life and listed resonance, synchronicity, wayfinding, amplification, and learning/knowledge symmetry aspects of connectivist learning. I don't know if he intends them as critical (or perhaps higher order) thinking skills, but they resonate with me that way. Recognizing and engaging pockets of resonance in an environment seems to be a critical thinking skill needed for mapping the rhizome.
tags: complexity ple elpcrithnk