Download high-resolution image
Listen to a clip from the audiobook
audio play button
0:00
0:00

Raising Critical Thinkers

A Parent's Guide to Growing Wise Kids in the Digital Age

Foreword by Barbara Oakley
Listen to a clip from the audiobook
audio play button
0:00
0:00
A guide for parents to help children of all ages process the onslaught of unfiltered information in the digital age.

Education is not solely about acquiring information and skills across subject areas, but also about understanding how and why we believe what we do. At a time when online media has created a virtual firehose of information and opinions, parents and teachers worry how students will interpret what they read and see. Amid the noise, it has become increasingly important to examine different perspectives with both curiosity and discernment. But how do parents teach these skills to their children?

Drawing on more than twenty years’ experience homeschooling and developing curricula, Julie Bogart offers practical tools to help children at every stage of development to grow in their ability to explore the world around them, examine how their loyalties and biases affect their beliefs, and generate fresh insight rather than simply recycling what they’ve been taught. Full of accessible stories and activities for children of all ages, Raising Critical Thinkers helps parents to nurture passionate learners with thoughtful minds and empathetic hearts.


*
This audiobook includes a downloadable PDF that contains exercises from the book.
Introduction

I knelt next to boxes of opened letters addressed to my grandparents scattered on the carpet in the living room. My two aunts and I paged through each one to determine which to keep and which to toss. My beloved Bapa had died. His wife survived him, but she suffered from dementia. 

I popped open the top of a more recent box of letters. These had been written within the last year. No stamps. I stripped the vanilla pages from their unsealed envelopes to discover love letters penned by my grand-father to his wife of sixty plus years. Eva had lost the ability to speak coherently and had forgotten her own name. My heart squeezed, imag-ining my grandfather writing to the woman he had loved for decades, willing her to understand, knowing she couldn’t read a word. My Bapa’s beautiful penmanship curled into paragraphs of memory.He wrote, “Eva, remember when we climbed the little hilltop to-gether, where I first made love to you?”

My jaw dropped. My Catholic  grandfather—  talking about his 1930s love affair with my grandmother before they were married. I stopped my two aunts from their estate duties. “June, Shevawn, listen to this!”

I read the paragraph aloud, and the much younger of my two aunts, Shevawn, whooped, declaring, “And they lectured me about the sanctity of my virginity before marriage! What’s up with that?”

My other, more serious and older aunt, a professor of ethics and religion and a former nun, immediately capped our howling laughter. “That can’t mean what you think it means!” She avoided saying the words. I did not: “You mean sex? Come on, June! Imagine Eva, Phil? Taking a roll in the hay on the hill where they first declared their love for each other? It’s romantic! Incredible!” I teased her to lighten the mood.

She wasn’t amused, but Shevawn laughed louder. After a moment, June leaked a small smile, considering the torrid possibility of her parents having sex before marriage, and gently told us to calm down, that we had work to do. She had allowed herself the possibility of my  interpretation—  a moment of  amusement—  but she would not be swayed from her task.

I enjoyed this impromptu sitcom moment. I knew the complexity of the ideas in conflict. In the 1930s, to “make love” to someone meant to put the moves on the woman of your dreams. It didn’t mean to have sex, the way it does today. But this letter had landed us in trickier territory. My Bapa hadn’t written this note in 1937. He’d written it in 1997. He referenced an experience from the 1930s, yet recorded it in the full light of the  late-twentieth century. Certainly, he knew the changing times and the way sexual innuendo had altered the meaning of those two words. Yet perhaps he was calling back to a previous meaning deliberately. Did he use that  old-  time language to jar his wife’s confused mind into re-calling a sweeter period of her life? Or was he expressing nostalgia for his own memories using the idiom of that day? Or had we stumbled on a deathbed  revelation—  a  confession—  a scandal and secret he had kept until his dying  day—  that he and Eva, the lifelong Catholics, had been lovers before they were married?

My aunt June wanted her parents to be good Catholics for their entire lives. My younger aunt Shevawn wanted them to be rebels, revealing a long-hidden willingness to put their own values ahead of church doctrine. Each of these interpretations matched the sisters’ per-sonalities and had less to do with my grandparents than the story my aunts wanted to tell themselves about their parents. Later that weekend, I ribbed my mother that her Catholic parents may have had sex before marriage after all. She chuckled and dismissed the notion as ridiculous. Her memory of growing up Catholic with these parents shaped her  beliefs—  no late- in- life letter could alter what she knew about her parents.

You’re probably wondering: Who was right? That’s the essence of critical thought right there. We take data, experiences, language, mem-ories, and beliefs and mix them together to form opinions. In this case, my family never agreed on the correct connotation of the “making love” idiom as written in the letter. My Bapa had passed on. Whatever the meaning, it had died with him. For me, the love letter remains a deli-cious  enigma—  one of those delightful paradoxes of textual interpre-tation that reminds me that critical thinking doesn’t always lead to  airtight conclusions.

The ability to evaluate evidence, to notice bias as it kicks into gear, to consider a variety of perspectives (even if they make you uncom-fortable), and then to render a possible  verdict—  what you believe to be true, for  now—  is the heart of the critical thinking task. It’s a tall order and really tough to do with your own family because your childhood beliefs are often the most familiar and undetected.

Critical thinking is more than critiquing someone else’s ideas. It’s the ability to question your own, too. In publishing, we have an expression: “Content is king.” In academics, I like another motto: “Context is everything.” What you know, how you know it, why you know it, what you don’t know, why you don’t  know—  these invisible factors shape how we understand every subject under the sun. In this book we’re going to explore how your kids make meaning for themselves and how to improve the quality of those assessments. Each day, whether they’re aware of it or not, kids evaluate evidence and form beliefs. They’ll think again and discard some of those same beliefs years later. How they think will be responsible for their  well-  cultivated religious or nonreligious viewpoints. They’ll arrive at political positions one year and overturn outdated ones years later for reasons they value. In truth, we all use various critical thinking tools to make all kinds of decisions. We even use critical thinking to order off a menu! We decide which items will hit the spot using personal criteria. How hungry am I? What’s in season? Will this meal make me use my hands (on a first date, no thank you!)?

Naturally, some contexts for critical thinking are low stakes. You can order a meal, dislike the taste, and regret your choice without any other negative consequence. Other judgments we make have lasting im-plications that impact other people, not just ourselves. For example, the decision to go to war has vast consequences for all people involved and for years to come. To make a quality judgment, the thinking must be deep, rich, sober, and purposeful. That’s why raising skillful critical thinkers is  essential—  how our children think will create the world they share.

Have you ever wondered what’s going on in your children’s minds after you read, study, watch a movie, teach a math process, or play a video game with them? Maybe you wonder why a sister taunts her brother, unable to imagine the distress she’s causing. Perhaps your student declares a solution to a problem that seems monstrous to you. You may notice that a teenager appears “obsessed” with a video game, and you draw the worrying conclusion that that teen loves  violence—  but can you be sure? How do we understand the meaning kids make for themselves? How do we help them reason more effectively and compas-sionately?

This book is about raising critical  thinkers—  in today’s global, digital environment. Today’s kids are swimming in a sea of declarations. Ranting online has the appearance of confident truth. Most parents want to protect their kids from misinformation. What happens when an unsupervised child stumbles on a logical presentation of facts for a per-spective that contradicts the family beliefs? You might be wondering, as I did while raising my kids: Is it more dangerous to read the opposing view or to be protected from it?

In my first book, The Brave Learner, I looked at the power of envi-ronmental and emotional context to aid learning—  real-life contexts, like adding the surprise of cookies and tea to the study of poetry, pro-viding kind collaboration to a struggling learner. In this book, I want to move the furniture around in our  minds—  how do we set the table to generate fresh insight rather than recycle what’s been taught? Is it possible to sustain “childlike wonder” into adulthood, or does it get lost in that journey to maturity? How do we help kids discover more about the subjects they study, not just what standardized tests require our children to demonstrate? How do we activate our children’s imaginations for sub-jects like history or the social sciences, and even math and science? What do we do about the endless sea of information on the internet? Can kids be critical thinkers about films, novels, and video games they love, too? In other words, how can we lead our learners to think more deeply, thoughtfully, and imaginatively about everything in their world?

If we give students the tools of inquiry, however, we have to be pre-pared for the results. They’ll ask hard-to- hear, provocative questions. They’ll jump in and use technology and social media apps without having considered their purpose or source. They’ll adopt viewpoints that challenge your  well-  settled ones. It can be jarring to allow kids the leeway to be forthright about how they generate meaning. Hang tough, however. The electric truth is that critical thinkers become versatile readers, skilled writers, and consequential adults. They’re engaged students in and out of the classroom. They innovate, they challenge the status quo, they vote and volunteer, and they make thoughtful contributions to the places where they work. They find powerful new ways to acquire the skills they need to thrive; they grow healthy families; and they become delightful, responsible adults. To be a critical thinker is to be a person with insight, empathy, humility, self-  awareness, mental acuity, and intellectual aliveness. Truly, raising critical thinkers is the most exciting and important work we can do as parents and educators.

I’ve spent the last three decades working with all kinds of young thinkers. I home-educated my five children for seventeen years, I built a company with a team of skilled professionals that has coached thou-sands of students of all ages to think and write well, and I’ve taught in-coming freshmen at Xavier University. In all those years of teaching, what shines most brightly is the incredible high students get when they experience an epiphany of insight. They’re startled by their own bril-liance when they generate fresh perspectives.

I’ve distilled my favorite lessons from those years of investment into this  book— both philosophy and practice. In part 1, “What Is a Critical Thinker?” I lay the groundwork for how any of us forms a worldview. How can we teach our kids to differentiate bias from belief or facts from interpretations? Where do  well-f  ormed opinions come from, and on what basis do we hold them? How do school experiences and internet searches influence how our kids think? What role does their identity play in how they learn? In most chapters, I include activities to try with the whole family.

In part 2, “Read, Experience, Encounter: A Real Education,” I explore the three key ways any of us learns. I challenge the idea that reading is  enough—  that a  well-  read person is automatically a  well-  educated one. We take a look at how digital life is altering our brains and our kids’ ability to read closely and deeply. I provide strategies for how to re-capture that depth, too. Then I take a look at the kinds of practical expe-riences and encounters with people that lead to breakthrough insights and a more thoughtful relationship to any subject they study or any in-terest they pursue.

Part 3, “The Rhetorical Imagination,” is the big kahuna! Once your students understand how they build their worldviews and know how to investigate a topic deeply, they’re ready to expand how many points of view they can examine at once. They will have entered the stage of development I call the “rhetorical imagination”—the capacity to think critically and imaginatively. In this section, I offer you tools to help your students interpret texts and to compare and contrast more than one viewpoint. Then I show you how to help your emerging young adults cope with the destabilization of their habits of thought. I also provide guidance to you, the parent, for how to navigate those turbulent waters, particularly when you have teens who are dead set on challenging your cherished ideals. Believe it or not, this is an essential stage of devel-opment for them. Let’s embrace it and learn to do it well.

Each chapter builds on the previous one, so reading in order is ad-vised. That said, you’ll come back to this book. The practices can be used again and again, and you may notice that you need different chapters during different seasons of your child’s life.

In short, this book is for you if you’ve asked What’s the point of all this education? There’s got to be more than passing tests and getting into college. It’s especially for you if you want your children to have a big, juicy, insightful educational experience in all the subjects and beyond. You have the chance to raise good people who contribute to the  well-being of one another and bring a vibrant creativity to their thinking processes. It’s an exciting journey, and you get to be a part of it! Let’s get started.
© Daniel Smyth
Julie Bogart is the creator of the award-winning, innovative Brave Writer program, teaching writing and language arts to thousands of families for more than twenty-five years. She’s the founder of Brave Learner Home, a 15,000-member community which supports homeschooling parents through coaching and teaching. Bogart is also the host of the popular Brave Writer podcast. Bogart holds a BA from UCLA and an MA from Xavier University, where she’s taught as an adjunct professor and was awarded the prestigious Madges Award for Outstanding Contribution to Society. She has five adult kids and three grandchildren. Bogart is also the author of The Brave Learner and Raising Critical Thinkers. View titles by Julie Bogart

About

A guide for parents to help children of all ages process the onslaught of unfiltered information in the digital age.

Education is not solely about acquiring information and skills across subject areas, but also about understanding how and why we believe what we do. At a time when online media has created a virtual firehose of information and opinions, parents and teachers worry how students will interpret what they read and see. Amid the noise, it has become increasingly important to examine different perspectives with both curiosity and discernment. But how do parents teach these skills to their children?

Drawing on more than twenty years’ experience homeschooling and developing curricula, Julie Bogart offers practical tools to help children at every stage of development to grow in their ability to explore the world around them, examine how their loyalties and biases affect their beliefs, and generate fresh insight rather than simply recycling what they’ve been taught. Full of accessible stories and activities for children of all ages, Raising Critical Thinkers helps parents to nurture passionate learners with thoughtful minds and empathetic hearts.


*
This audiobook includes a downloadable PDF that contains exercises from the book.

Excerpt

Introduction

I knelt next to boxes of opened letters addressed to my grandparents scattered on the carpet in the living room. My two aunts and I paged through each one to determine which to keep and which to toss. My beloved Bapa had died. His wife survived him, but she suffered from dementia. 

I popped open the top of a more recent box of letters. These had been written within the last year. No stamps. I stripped the vanilla pages from their unsealed envelopes to discover love letters penned by my grand-father to his wife of sixty plus years. Eva had lost the ability to speak coherently and had forgotten her own name. My heart squeezed, imag-ining my grandfather writing to the woman he had loved for decades, willing her to understand, knowing she couldn’t read a word. My Bapa’s beautiful penmanship curled into paragraphs of memory.He wrote, “Eva, remember when we climbed the little hilltop to-gether, where I first made love to you?”

My jaw dropped. My Catholic  grandfather—  talking about his 1930s love affair with my grandmother before they were married. I stopped my two aunts from their estate duties. “June, Shevawn, listen to this!”

I read the paragraph aloud, and the much younger of my two aunts, Shevawn, whooped, declaring, “And they lectured me about the sanctity of my virginity before marriage! What’s up with that?”

My other, more serious and older aunt, a professor of ethics and religion and a former nun, immediately capped our howling laughter. “That can’t mean what you think it means!” She avoided saying the words. I did not: “You mean sex? Come on, June! Imagine Eva, Phil? Taking a roll in the hay on the hill where they first declared their love for each other? It’s romantic! Incredible!” I teased her to lighten the mood.

She wasn’t amused, but Shevawn laughed louder. After a moment, June leaked a small smile, considering the torrid possibility of her parents having sex before marriage, and gently told us to calm down, that we had work to do. She had allowed herself the possibility of my  interpretation—  a moment of  amusement—  but she would not be swayed from her task.

I enjoyed this impromptu sitcom moment. I knew the complexity of the ideas in conflict. In the 1930s, to “make love” to someone meant to put the moves on the woman of your dreams. It didn’t mean to have sex, the way it does today. But this letter had landed us in trickier territory. My Bapa hadn’t written this note in 1937. He’d written it in 1997. He referenced an experience from the 1930s, yet recorded it in the full light of the  late-twentieth century. Certainly, he knew the changing times and the way sexual innuendo had altered the meaning of those two words. Yet perhaps he was calling back to a previous meaning deliberately. Did he use that  old-  time language to jar his wife’s confused mind into re-calling a sweeter period of her life? Or was he expressing nostalgia for his own memories using the idiom of that day? Or had we stumbled on a deathbed  revelation—  a  confession—  a scandal and secret he had kept until his dying  day—  that he and Eva, the lifelong Catholics, had been lovers before they were married?

My aunt June wanted her parents to be good Catholics for their entire lives. My younger aunt Shevawn wanted them to be rebels, revealing a long-hidden willingness to put their own values ahead of church doctrine. Each of these interpretations matched the sisters’ per-sonalities and had less to do with my grandparents than the story my aunts wanted to tell themselves about their parents. Later that weekend, I ribbed my mother that her Catholic parents may have had sex before marriage after all. She chuckled and dismissed the notion as ridiculous. Her memory of growing up Catholic with these parents shaped her  beliefs—  no late- in- life letter could alter what she knew about her parents.

You’re probably wondering: Who was right? That’s the essence of critical thought right there. We take data, experiences, language, mem-ories, and beliefs and mix them together to form opinions. In this case, my family never agreed on the correct connotation of the “making love” idiom as written in the letter. My Bapa had passed on. Whatever the meaning, it had died with him. For me, the love letter remains a deli-cious  enigma—  one of those delightful paradoxes of textual interpre-tation that reminds me that critical thinking doesn’t always lead to  airtight conclusions.

The ability to evaluate evidence, to notice bias as it kicks into gear, to consider a variety of perspectives (even if they make you uncom-fortable), and then to render a possible  verdict—  what you believe to be true, for  now—  is the heart of the critical thinking task. It’s a tall order and really tough to do with your own family because your childhood beliefs are often the most familiar and undetected.

Critical thinking is more than critiquing someone else’s ideas. It’s the ability to question your own, too. In publishing, we have an expression: “Content is king.” In academics, I like another motto: “Context is everything.” What you know, how you know it, why you know it, what you don’t know, why you don’t  know—  these invisible factors shape how we understand every subject under the sun. In this book we’re going to explore how your kids make meaning for themselves and how to improve the quality of those assessments. Each day, whether they’re aware of it or not, kids evaluate evidence and form beliefs. They’ll think again and discard some of those same beliefs years later. How they think will be responsible for their  well-  cultivated religious or nonreligious viewpoints. They’ll arrive at political positions one year and overturn outdated ones years later for reasons they value. In truth, we all use various critical thinking tools to make all kinds of decisions. We even use critical thinking to order off a menu! We decide which items will hit the spot using personal criteria. How hungry am I? What’s in season? Will this meal make me use my hands (on a first date, no thank you!)?

Naturally, some contexts for critical thinking are low stakes. You can order a meal, dislike the taste, and regret your choice without any other negative consequence. Other judgments we make have lasting im-plications that impact other people, not just ourselves. For example, the decision to go to war has vast consequences for all people involved and for years to come. To make a quality judgment, the thinking must be deep, rich, sober, and purposeful. That’s why raising skillful critical thinkers is  essential—  how our children think will create the world they share.

Have you ever wondered what’s going on in your children’s minds after you read, study, watch a movie, teach a math process, or play a video game with them? Maybe you wonder why a sister taunts her brother, unable to imagine the distress she’s causing. Perhaps your student declares a solution to a problem that seems monstrous to you. You may notice that a teenager appears “obsessed” with a video game, and you draw the worrying conclusion that that teen loves  violence—  but can you be sure? How do we understand the meaning kids make for themselves? How do we help them reason more effectively and compas-sionately?

This book is about raising critical  thinkers—  in today’s global, digital environment. Today’s kids are swimming in a sea of declarations. Ranting online has the appearance of confident truth. Most parents want to protect their kids from misinformation. What happens when an unsupervised child stumbles on a logical presentation of facts for a per-spective that contradicts the family beliefs? You might be wondering, as I did while raising my kids: Is it more dangerous to read the opposing view or to be protected from it?

In my first book, The Brave Learner, I looked at the power of envi-ronmental and emotional context to aid learning—  real-life contexts, like adding the surprise of cookies and tea to the study of poetry, pro-viding kind collaboration to a struggling learner. In this book, I want to move the furniture around in our  minds—  how do we set the table to generate fresh insight rather than recycle what’s been taught? Is it possible to sustain “childlike wonder” into adulthood, or does it get lost in that journey to maturity? How do we help kids discover more about the subjects they study, not just what standardized tests require our children to demonstrate? How do we activate our children’s imaginations for sub-jects like history or the social sciences, and even math and science? What do we do about the endless sea of information on the internet? Can kids be critical thinkers about films, novels, and video games they love, too? In other words, how can we lead our learners to think more deeply, thoughtfully, and imaginatively about everything in their world?

If we give students the tools of inquiry, however, we have to be pre-pared for the results. They’ll ask hard-to- hear, provocative questions. They’ll jump in and use technology and social media apps without having considered their purpose or source. They’ll adopt viewpoints that challenge your  well-  settled ones. It can be jarring to allow kids the leeway to be forthright about how they generate meaning. Hang tough, however. The electric truth is that critical thinkers become versatile readers, skilled writers, and consequential adults. They’re engaged students in and out of the classroom. They innovate, they challenge the status quo, they vote and volunteer, and they make thoughtful contributions to the places where they work. They find powerful new ways to acquire the skills they need to thrive; they grow healthy families; and they become delightful, responsible adults. To be a critical thinker is to be a person with insight, empathy, humility, self-  awareness, mental acuity, and intellectual aliveness. Truly, raising critical thinkers is the most exciting and important work we can do as parents and educators.

I’ve spent the last three decades working with all kinds of young thinkers. I home-educated my five children for seventeen years, I built a company with a team of skilled professionals that has coached thou-sands of students of all ages to think and write well, and I’ve taught in-coming freshmen at Xavier University. In all those years of teaching, what shines most brightly is the incredible high students get when they experience an epiphany of insight. They’re startled by their own bril-liance when they generate fresh perspectives.

I’ve distilled my favorite lessons from those years of investment into this  book— both philosophy and practice. In part 1, “What Is a Critical Thinker?” I lay the groundwork for how any of us forms a worldview. How can we teach our kids to differentiate bias from belief or facts from interpretations? Where do  well-f  ormed opinions come from, and on what basis do we hold them? How do school experiences and internet searches influence how our kids think? What role does their identity play in how they learn? In most chapters, I include activities to try with the whole family.

In part 2, “Read, Experience, Encounter: A Real Education,” I explore the three key ways any of us learns. I challenge the idea that reading is  enough—  that a  well-  read person is automatically a  well-  educated one. We take a look at how digital life is altering our brains and our kids’ ability to read closely and deeply. I provide strategies for how to re-capture that depth, too. Then I take a look at the kinds of practical expe-riences and encounters with people that lead to breakthrough insights and a more thoughtful relationship to any subject they study or any in-terest they pursue.

Part 3, “The Rhetorical Imagination,” is the big kahuna! Once your students understand how they build their worldviews and know how to investigate a topic deeply, they’re ready to expand how many points of view they can examine at once. They will have entered the stage of development I call the “rhetorical imagination”—the capacity to think critically and imaginatively. In this section, I offer you tools to help your students interpret texts and to compare and contrast more than one viewpoint. Then I show you how to help your emerging young adults cope with the destabilization of their habits of thought. I also provide guidance to you, the parent, for how to navigate those turbulent waters, particularly when you have teens who are dead set on challenging your cherished ideals. Believe it or not, this is an essential stage of devel-opment for them. Let’s embrace it and learn to do it well.

Each chapter builds on the previous one, so reading in order is ad-vised. That said, you’ll come back to this book. The practices can be used again and again, and you may notice that you need different chapters during different seasons of your child’s life.

In short, this book is for you if you’ve asked What’s the point of all this education? There’s got to be more than passing tests and getting into college. It’s especially for you if you want your children to have a big, juicy, insightful educational experience in all the subjects and beyond. You have the chance to raise good people who contribute to the  well-being of one another and bring a vibrant creativity to their thinking processes. It’s an exciting journey, and you get to be a part of it! Let’s get started.

Author

© Daniel Smyth
Julie Bogart is the creator of the award-winning, innovative Brave Writer program, teaching writing and language arts to thousands of families for more than twenty-five years. She’s the founder of Brave Learner Home, a 15,000-member community which supports homeschooling parents through coaching and teaching. Bogart is also the host of the popular Brave Writer podcast. Bogart holds a BA from UCLA and an MA from Xavier University, where she’s taught as an adjunct professor and was awarded the prestigious Madges Award for Outstanding Contribution to Society. She has five adult kids and three grandchildren. Bogart is also the author of The Brave Learner and Raising Critical Thinkers. View titles by Julie Bogart