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Relationship Between a Teacher Educator's Questions and the Development of Prospective Teachers' Critical Thinking

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dc.contributor.author Soysal, Yilmaz
dc.date.accessioned 2024-03-15T08:03:10Z
dc.date.available 2024-03-15T08:03:10Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.identifier.issn 2096-5311
dc.identifier.issn 2632-1742
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11547/11319
dc.description.abstract PurposeThis study explores the relationships between the cognitive demands of the questions asked by a teacher educator (TE) and prospective teachers' (PT) capacity for critical thinking (CT).Design/Approach/MethodsParticipants comprised a TE and 32 PTs. The cognitive demands of the TE's questions and PTs' CT were analyzed using a systematic observation approach.FindingsResults indicate that there are tangible connections between the increasing mental demand of TE questions and PTs' higher-order cognitive processing. The PTs achieved higher-order CT when the TE asked more cognitively demanding questions. For instance, when the TE's questions were pitched at the cognitive demand levels-namely, the analyze, evaluate, and/or create levels-the PT answers were longer and reflected higher CT, such as inductive reasoning, suggesting new ways of thinking, or legitimating the arguments of others. Accordingly, results suggest that intentionally subjecting PTs to sustained higher cognitive demands via questions may help them reach their optimal CT capacity.Originality/ValueAlthough proposed teaching strategies have been invaluable in proposing content-specific interventions for fostering the CT of university students, how lecturers should use their questions to conduct such interventions has been overlooked. This study addresses this gap. tr_TR
dc.language.iso en tr_TR
dc.relation.ispartofseries 6;1
dc.title Relationship Between a Teacher Educator's Questions and the Development of Prospective Teachers' Critical Thinking tr_TR
dc.type Article tr_TR


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