47 pages 1 hour read

bell hooks

Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom

Nonfiction | Collection of Letters | Adult | Published in 2007

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Important Quotes

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“Thinking is an action. For all aspiring intellectuals, thoughts are the laboratory where one goes to pose questions and find answers, and the place where visions of theory and praxis come together.”


(Teaching 1, Page 7)

In Teaching 1, bell hooks defines Critical Thinking as Radical Openness. She suggests that critical thinking is an action, meaning that it takes intention and practice. In her work, she shows how educators can use this idea to lead their students toward critical thinking. Instead of looking at critical thinking as something that students should be able to do innately, her pedagogical theory emphasizes that students must relearn critical thinking through continued effort.

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“So much academic training encourages teachers to assume that they must be right at all times. Instead, I propose that teachers must be open at all times, and we must be willing to acknowledge what we do not know.”


(Teaching 1, Page 10)

Central to hooks’s work is Engaged Pedagogy and a Community of Learning. hooks views teachers and students as part of a partnership based on trust and love. She argues that many teachers fall into traditional methods of teaching because they fear the outcome if they embrace engaged pedagogy. However, hooks suggests that the responsibility of learning does not fall solely on the shoulders of educators: Both students and teachers bring learning to the table.

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“Progressive Educators continue to honor education as the practice of freedom because we understand that democracy thrives in an environment where learning is valued, where the ability to think is the mark of responsible citizenship, where free speech and the will to dissent is accepted and encouraged.”


(Teaching 2, Page 17)

hooks contrasts traditional methods of teaching with progressive education and engaged pedagogy. She cites her own teachers who believed that education was a pathway to betterment and who promoted