Use these resources to help develop your critical reading & note making skills, to help develop your own arguments and judgements. When reading to make best use of your time you should read actively ...
With so much information—and misinformation—coming at them every day, students need to learn how to verify truth.
Here you will find resources to help you write critically and effectively, by weighing up and understanding arguments, and building arguments of your own. Whilst it is essential to engage in critical ...
This issue of borderlands showcases what I propose to call ‘slow criticism’. Slow criticism is a criticism that takes the time to interrogate the scholarly orthodoxies that invariably seem to ...
In the first section of the Higher English Critical Reading assessment, you will be asked to comment on examples of language, such as word choice and imagery. Revise how to identify and analyse some ...
Critical thinking springs from the notion of reflective thought proposed by Dewey (1933), who borrowed from the work of philosophers such as William James and Charles Peirce. Reflective thought was ...