7- SHO‗BA BOSHLANG‗ICH TA‘LIM SAMARADORLIGINI OSHIRISH MUAMMOLARI IMPORTANCE OF DEVELOPING STUDENTS‘ THINKING SKILLS AND TEACHING TO CRITICAL THINKING Aripova Shoira Djurakulovna, Lecturer, Department of Literature, Tashkent State Agrarian University In recent years there has been growing interest across the world in ways of developing children‘s
thinking and learning skills. This interest has been fed by new knowledge about how the brain works and
how people learn, and evidence that specific interventions can improve children‘s thinking and
intelligence. The particular ways in which people apply their minds to solving problems are called
thinking skills. Many researchers suggest that thinking skills are essential to effective learning, though not
all agree on the definition of this term. If thinking is how children make sense of learning then developing
their thinking skills will help them get more out of learning and life. This chapter looks at the implications
of research into ways to develop thinking children, thinking classrooms and thinking schools.
Thinking skills are the mental processes that we apply when we seek to make sense of experience.
Thinking skills enable us to integrate each new experience into the schema that we are constructing of
"how things are". It is apparent that better thinking will help us to learn more from our experience and to
make better use of our intelligence .It has always been the central aim of education to improve the quality
of thinking because better thinking will not only enable us to become more successful at learning but will
also equip us for life, enabling us to realise our own potential and to contribute to the development of
society. Thinking Skills are the mental processes we use to do things like: solve problems, make
decisions, ask questions, make plans, pass judgements, organise information and create new ideas. Often
we're not aware of our thinking - it happens automatically - but if we take time to ponder what's going on
then we can become more efficient and more creative with our minds.
In recent years there has been much research into ways of developing children‘s thinking and
learning skills. This has been informed by growing knowledge about how the brain works, how people
learn and how teaching approaches can help improve children‘s ability to think and learn. ‗Thinking
skills‘ is a term often used to refer to the many capacities involved in thinking and learning. These skills
are seen as fundamental to lifelong learning, active citizenship and emotional intelligence. Research
shows that thinking is developed through cognitive challenge, and opportunities for collaborative work
and metacognitive discussion. Successful approaches to teaching thinking include cognitive acceleration,
brain-based and philosophical approaches. These and other teaching strategies can help raise standards of
achievement and create thinking children, thinking classrooms and thinking schools.
The 21st century learning skills are often called the 4 C‘s: critical thinking, creative thinking,
communicating, and collaborating. These skills help students learn, and so they are vital to success in
school and beyond. Inquire teaches specific strategies for developing critical thinking skills.
The only way to teach critical thinking is to have students think critically about something. The
only way to teach problem solving is to present students with problems that they must solve. That's why
teaching 21st century skills is a perfect match for any content-area class. Critical thinking deepens
students' understanding of science, and science sharpens students' critical thinking.