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Assessment includes attendance, active participation, short in-class presentation, interactive Moodle activities, final written test, and final oral exam.
Assessment Details
Course Attendance
Students are expected to attend the classes and actively participate in assigned in-class activities.
Each student is entitled to deliver one short in-class presentation at the beginning of the seminar. If the number of students signed up for the seminar exceeds the number of seminar sessions, the presentation will be assigned as a team presentation. The aim of the presentation is to summarise the discussion of the previous class and open space of clarifying and further attending to any unfinished business; this presentation will be assigned at the end of every session. Students who give this presentation will earn up to 10 % of their final grade.
Final Written Test The aim of the test is to assess students’ knowledge the subject matter covered during the course (as presented in course handouts) as well as their ability to practically apply this knowledge in assigned questions, tasks, and activities.
Final Oral Exam The aim of the test is to assess students’ knowledge the subject matter covered during the seminar (as presented in course handouts) as well as their ability to practically apply this knowledge in assigned questions, tasks, and activities in discussion with the teacher.
Last update: Štefl Martin (28.05.2024)
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R: Bowel, Tracy and Kemp, Gary. Critical Thinking: A Concise Guide. Routledge 2020. R: Foresman, Galen A., et al. The Critical Thinking Toolkit. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2017. A: Baggini, Julian and Fosl, Peter S. The Philosophers Toolkit. A Compendium of Philosophical Concepts and Methods. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., 2010.
Last update: Scholleová Hana (16.12.2021)
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1. Defining Critical Thinking: What is it and what is it good for? 2. The language of Critical Thinking: A quick note. 3. Introduction to informal logic 4. Defining arguments, standard form, argument mapping 5. Neutral Language? 6. Assessing and evaluating arguments: an introduction 7. Classifying Arguments: Deduction, Induction, Analogy 8. Assessing and evaluating arguments II: Validity and Soundness 9. Logical and Cognitive Fallacies 10. Arguments and Counterarguments 11. Logical and Cognitive Fallacies Continued 12. Conditions 13. Arguing with Modality: Certainty and Probability 14. Discourses and Rhetoric
Last update: Scholleová Hana (10.12.2021)
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