ebook img

When Critical Thinking Met English Literature: A Resource Book for Teachers and Their Students PDF

161 Pages·2009·1.03 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview When Critical Thinking Met English Literature: A Resource Book for Teachers and Their Students

When Critical Thinking met English Literature Morerelatedtitles CriticalThinkingforASLevel RoyvandenBrink-Budgen CriticalThinkingforA2 RoyvandenBrink-Budgen CriticalThinkingforStudents Learntheskillsofcriticalassessmentandeffectiveargument ‘Areallyusefulintroductiontodevelopingandimprovingacoreskill.’ –AssociationofCommonwealthUniversitiesBulletin WritinganEssay Simpletechniquestotransformyourcourseworkandexaminations ‘Thereisalotofgoodsenseinthisbook.’– TimesEducationalSupplement howtobooks Pleasesendforafreecopyofthelatestcatalogue: HowToBooks SpringHillHouse,SpringHillRoad Begbroke,OxfordOX51RX,UnitedKingdom [email protected] www.howtobooks.co.uk When Critical Thinking met English Literature A resource book for teachers and their students BELINDA HAKES howtobooks DEDICATION This book is for Terry, who gives me the precious gifts of time and space, and for all our family for their interest and encouragement. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS My thanks first go to Roy van den Brink-Budgen, second only to Socrates in the critical thinking world, and without whom this book would never have been started. Thanks also to my friend, colleague and partner-in-crime Noel Stewart, without whose infectious enthusiasm it probably wouldn’t have been finished. Thanks to Nikki and Giles, for taking the risk, to my editor, Nick Hutchins, and to the students of Wyke Sixth Form College, for inspiring me and going along with my weird ideas. Live long, read much and think well! Published by How To Content, A division of How To Books Ltd, Spring Hill House, Spring Hill Road Begbroke, Oxford OX5 1RX, United Kingdom Tel: 01865 375794 Fax: 01865 379162 [email protected] www.howtobooks.co.uk All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or stored in an information retrieval system (other than for purposes of review) without the express permission of the publisher in writing. The right of Belinda Hakes to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. © 2008 Belinda Hakes British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. First published 2008 First published in electronic form 2008 ISBN: 978 1 84803 292 7 Cover design by Baseline Arts Ltd, Oxford Produced for How To Books by Deer Park Productions, Tavistock Typeset by specialist publishing services ltd, Montgomery Contents Introduction vii Preface – Critical Thinking and English Literature xi 1 Othello 1 2 Measure for Measure 15 3 MuchAdoAbout Nothing 39 4 Credibility and the First Person Narrator 47 5 Waiting for Godot 65 6 Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead 72 7 Critical Thinking and Poetry 77 8 The Resolution of Dilemmas 96 9 Words and Meaning 109 10 Critical Thinking and Other Texts 115 11 Introducing Critical Thinking to an English Literature Class 122 12 Using CriticalThinkingApproaches to (post-16) GCSE English 131 Appendix 140 Index 141 Index of texts 143 v This page intentionally left blank Introduction Critical thinking is often seen as a new subject. But, of course, though the name might be new, the subject isn’t. Those of us engaged in it are, at best, dwarfs standing on the shoulders of giants. In this position, of course, dwarfs are supposed to be able to see further than the giants. Sometimes, however, people in critical thinking seem to be looking down rather than towards the horizon.They need to have their heads lifted. Here is a book that should help this to happen. Forme,oneofthegreatestthinkersofalltimewasPeterAbelard.But,ifhe’s known at all these days, it’s normally only for his love of Heloïse and the pricehepaidforthatrelationship.However,inhistime,manysawhimasthe greatest philosopher since Aristotle. He was a brilliant logician, an outstanding teacher of logic, and was pre-eminent in rhetoric. And this tells us something. We have come to see the world (though we stand on others’ shoulders)inwaysthatimpoverishourthinking.Weseethestudyofliterature as having little or even nothing to tell us about the study of critical thinking (andviceversa).However,forAbelard(seeingveryclearlybystandingonthe shoulders of Aristotle), an understanding of language lay at the root of all intellectualendeavour.Hehadlearnedthatthecompositionofproseandverse (rhetoric) was a necessary step to a deeper understanding of logic. Indeed a contemporary epitaph describes him as being the bridge of rhetoric to the mountain of logic. It always strikes me as odd that, in today’s attempts at the assessment of critical thinking, the term ‘rhetoric’is used by many of those who write the papers as an example of poor argumentation. The student who uses ‘mere rhetoric’is castigated for not being a good Critical Thinker. So how have we come to this? How have we divorced an appreciation of prose and verse from critical thinking? This could be the subject of another book but, in the meantime, let us be pleased that we have someone who has made a contribution to rebuilding the bridge of rhetoric to the mountain of vii WHENCRITICALTHINKINGMETENGLISHLITERATURE logic.Someofyoumightrememberthat,forsometime,Ihavebeenspeaking ratherdarklyof‘aladyinHull’whohasbeendoingimportantworkinlinking the teaching of literature and critical thinking. Well, here is that lady. I have been involved in critical thinking for 21 years and have read a great dealofmaterialonthesubject.Unfortunately,muchofthestuffthat’swritten on it these days is remarkable for its lack of passion, its lack of intellectual excitement, its lack of fun. Using my own criteria of judgement, much of the stuff that’s written on critical thinking fails to make itself on to my bookshelves, being relegated instead to a filing cabinet drawer. This book, however, will sit proudly on one of my shelves, sharing space with the likes ofAbelard, Darwin, and Voltaire (as well as Donne and Keats). Thisbookhasmademethinkdifferentlyand,forthat,I’mverygrateful.This book should make all of us look at literature differently. It should certainly make us look at critical thinking differently. There’s nothing here of the passionless, of the unexciting, of the humourless recitals of tedious and artificial argument. Take for example, Belinda’s examination of Donne’s poem ‘The Flea’. Her showing this to be a remarkable chat-up approach through analogy is one that students will want to take apart, will want to evaluate(and,perhaps,willwanttouse).Thisissomuchbetterthansomany of the heart-deadening analogies that critical thinking students are given. For another example, take her examination of ‘The Ancient Mariner’. Here studentscanlookatissuesofcausationandcorrelationinanewway.Whatis the significance of the shooting of the albatross? Post hoc becomes central to the anguish, to notions of right and wrong. So who is this book for? It’s obviously for English teachers. They will find that, at one level, there is much here that might be familiar (and Belinda writes in a way that acknowledges their knowledge and expertise). But they will see the familiar in unfamiliar ways. They will find reasoning in poems; they will be intrigued by the finding of assumptions in narrative; they will find troublesome issues of credibility in all sorts of first-person accounts. For thoseEnglishteacherswhoalsoteachcriticalthinking,thisisabookthatwill transform their teaching, showing the richness of the connections they can make between the two subjects. viii INTRODUCTION Butthebookshouldalsohaveamuchwiderreadership.Forthoseofuswhose academic background is not English, there might seem to be dangers in tackling some of the material that’s in here. But critical thinking invites us to take risks.What does this mean?What is the significance of that? How could weexplainthis?Whatinferencecanbedrawnfromthat?We’reusedtotaking such risks with our material, such that a student might well come up with something we hadn’t thought of before. So, if you teach critical thinking, but don’t have a background in English, use this book to show you how to risk looking at literature in your teaching. Use it to add to your skills. Use it to encourage more cross-curricular links, teaching, and programmes. As Abelard explained, “spiritual men have made better progress in sacred doctrinebythestudyofliteraturethanbythemeritsofreligion”.I’msurethat he would want to update that pronouncement by saying “Critical Thinkers will make better progress in their thinking by studying literature than by just looking at what’s published in the majority of critical thinking books.” And I’m sure that, having read this book, you’ll agree. Roy van den Brink-Budgen ix

Description:
This book gives teachers of English Literature an engaging new way into texts, using the skills and approaches of A level Critical Thinking. It also provides teachers of Critical Thinking with useful and stimulating resources with which to practise the skills required at A level. It will also help t
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.