hum101 discussion forum
It should be noted that this is one of the toughest professors I have ever been graded by. I felt like your last post and assignments you wrote were, “TOP NOTCH!!” He gave me a 12 out of a possible 25 points on the discussion forum and an 80% for the 4 page APA written essay. He goes strictly by the rubric and the posted questions. Not an easy class, and by far, not an easy A.
Module 4: Discussion Forum
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Discerning Fallacies and Cognitive Biases in Our Thinking
Discussion Questions
A) Where do you see sociocentrism at work in your own thinking or the thinking of those around you? Why is sociocentrism detrimental to critical reasoning?
B) As you think about your personal goals and aspirations, what cognitive fallacies outlined by Wilke and Mata (2012) might impede your growth? What active steps might you take to recognize and combat such fallacious forms of thinking?
Requirements for Discussion Boards
- Use the required readings to analyze and engage the discussion board questions.
- Your initial post should be roughly 200 words (plus or minus 10%). Each subsequent post should be 100 words (plus or minus 10%).
- Include one or two scholarly sources that are not required or recommended for the HUM 101 course. The CSU-Global Library (Links to an external site.) is a good place to find these sources.
- Format your discussion, including all in-text citations and references, according to the CSU-Global Guide to Writing & APA (Links to an external site.).
- Each discussion board post (including follow-up posts) should include scholarly citations and references.
Reference
Paul, R., & Elder, L. (2012). Critical Thinking: Tools for Taking Charge of Your Learning and Your Life (3rd edition). Boston: Pearson.
Required
- Chapters 7, 11, & 13 in Critical thinking: Tools for taking charge of your learning and your life (3rd ed.).
- Anonymous. (2015). Let’s think about cognitive bias. Nature, 526(7572), 163.
- Lau, J., & Chan, J. (2017). Fallacies. Retrieved from http://philosophy.hku.hk/think/fallacy/
- Lau, J., & Chan, J. (2017). Inductive reasoning. Retrieved from http://philosophy.hku.hk/think/arg/induction.php
- Wilke A., & Mata, R. (2012) Cognitive bias. Retrieved from https://adweb.clarkson.edu/~awilke/Research_files/EoHB_Wilke_12.pdf
Recommended
- Caputo, A. (2013). A literature review of cognitive biases in negotiation processes. International Journal of Conflict Management, 24(4), 374-398.