Critical Thinking Toolkit
Use this during lessons 7–10 as a quick reference for questioning, evidence checks, argument structure, and tikanga-informed decision-making.
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🧠 Questions That Push Thinking
Tip: Start curious. Ask questions that help others explain their thinking (not “trap” them).
Clarify
- What do you mean by…?
- Can you give an example?
- What’s the key point in one sentence?
Evidence
- What evidence supports that?
- How do we know it’s true?
- What would change your mind?
Assumptions
- What are we assuming?
- Is there another way to see it?
- What’s missing from this story?
Impact
- Who benefits? Who might be harmed?
- What are the short-term vs long-term effects?
- What’s the fairest option?
Kupu āwhina (sentence starters): “I hear you saying…” • “My evidence is…” • “Another perspective could be…” • “Can we check the source?”
🔍 Source & Evidence Check (Quick)
Reliability checklist
- Who made it? Are they qualified or close to the issue?
- Why was it made? Inform, sell, persuade, entertain?
- Evidence: data, quotes, examples — or just opinions?
- Date: is it current enough for this topic?
- Cross-check: can another trusted source confirm it?
Strong evidence sounds like…
- “According to… (source), … (fact/data/quote).”
- “This matters because… (reasoning).”
- “A limitation of this source is… (bias/gaps).”
🪞 Bias & Perspective
Bias is when a source leans a certain way. It doesn’t always mean “bad” — it means we have to read carefully.
Clues to bias
- Very emotional language (rage, fear, shame)
- Only one side is shown
- Facts are missing or not linked
- Images/headlines don’t match the evidence
Perspective prompts
- Whose voice is loud here? Whose is missing?
- What might different groups think?
- What does our community know that outsiders might miss?
🧱 Build a Strong Argument (CER / PEEL)
CER
- C — Claim: what you believe
- E — Evidence: facts/data/quotes
- R — Reasoning: explain how evidence proves the claim
PEEL
- P — Point: main idea
- E — Evidence: proof
- E — Explain: meaning/impact
- L — Link: connect back to the claim
Counterpoint
- “Some people think… (counterpoint).”
- “However, the evidence shows…”
- “A fair compromise could be…”
🧨 Common Fallacies (Quick List)
Fallacies are “tricks” that make an argument sound strong even when the logic is weak.
Ad hominem
Attacking the person, not the idea.
Fix: “Let’s focus on the evidence.”
Straw man
Changing someone’s argument to an easier version.
Fix: “Can you restate their actual point?”
False cause
Assuming A caused B without proof.
Fix: “What else could explain it?”
Bandwagon
“Everyone thinks it, so it’s true.”
Fix: “What evidence supports it?”
🌿 Tikanga Decision Path (Ethics in Action)
Goal: make decisions that protect people’s mana, strengthen relationships, and care for the environment.
- Name the kaupapa: What’s the real issue?
- Identify who is affected: Who might benefit? Who might be harmed?
- Choose key values: e.g., manaakitanga, whanaungatanga, kaitiakitanga, kotahitanga, rangatiratanga.
- Check the evidence: What do we know for sure? What is uncertain?
- Consider consequences: short-term and long-term for people and place.
- Consult and listen: Who should be asked? Who has lived experience?
- Decide + act: Choose the most tika option you can.
- Review: Did the outcome match the values? What would we change next time?
💬 Respectful Disagreement (Discussion Norms)
Do
- Listen to understand first
- Use evidence and explain your reasoning
- Ask questions before challenging
- Protect everyone’s mana
Avoid
- Interrupting or mocking
- “Gotcha” arguments
- Exaggerating others’ views
- Sharing private stories without permission
Useful phrases
- “I agree with ___ because…”
- “I see it differently because…”
- “Can we check the source for that?”
- “What would be a fair compromise?”
🗣️ Feedback Starters
Glow / Grow
- Glow: Something strong about your evidence/reasoning…
- Grow: One thing to improve next…
I notice / I wonder
- I notice: (specific detail)…
- I wonder: (curious question)…
Two Stars and a Wish
- ⭐ Evidence strength
- ⭐ Clear structure
- ✨ Wish: a next improvement
🔗 Quick Links (Archive)
- Lesson 7: Research Skills & Ethical Inquiry
- Lesson 8: Evidence-Based Arguments
- Lesson 9: Ethical Decision-Making
- Lesson 10: Capstone Showcase
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