From Oral Storytelling to Critical Thinking: A Design-Based Research Pedagogical Intervention
Citation:
O'Reilly, Catherine Mary, From Oral Storytelling to Critical Thinking: A Design-Based Research Pedagogical Intervention, Trinity College Dublin, School of Education, Education, 2024Download Item:
Abstract:
Critical thinking is at the forefront of learning and gaining increasing attention as a 21stcentury
skill that helps students make well-informed decisions that positively impact their
learning and life opportunities. In early childhood services, children are viewed as intelligent
and capable thinkers and communicators, and educators are encouraged to scaffold their
thinking. Such a broad overview of thinking is vague and of limited pedagogical value.
Specific reference to the concept of critical thinking or strategies to encourage it are largely
absent from early education literature. According to educational literature, critical thinking
should be taught at all levels of education and, if practised, will develop throughout a
lifetime. This begs the question: if critical thinking develops over time, why do we not
introduce these skills in early childhood? One reason identified as a pedagogical gap this
study addresses is the view that more strategies and resources for educators to teach critical
thinking in the early years classroom are needed. This thesis reports on a study that
investigated the effects of an oral storytelling intervention in providing the opportunity for
children to practice critical thinking in the classroom. This research focuses on an
intervention programme implemented with preschool children from which critical thinking
skills will emerge. The implementation of the programme can be passed on to educators
during training. The study was conducted by adopting Design-Based Research (DBR) in
education. This approach to educational research is a form of experimental interventionist
research conducted with and for educators to improve or enhance the learning and teaching
environment. Data was generated during iterative rounds of coding employing reflexive
thematic analysis to categorise patterns that emerged from transcripts of the verbal
interactions during the intervention. The analyses of the DBR resulted in generating six
design principles that work as a framework to pave the way for educators from different
settings to introduce the concept of critical thinking in the form of oral storytelling to their
early years environments. Findings from this study indicate that preschool children engage in
many critical thinking skills under specific pedagogical conditions. The thesis concludes with
an overview of the contribution of this research to the field of critical thinking and early
childhood pedagogy and the implications of the study for research, policy and practice.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Irish Research Council
Author's Homepage:
https://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:OREILC31Description:
APPROVED
Author: O'Reilly, Catherine Mary
Advisor:
Devitt, AnnHayes, Nóirín
Publisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Education. Discipline of EducationType of material:
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