Summary
An important learning goal for every student at Union College is the ability to develop a thesis statement and then reason with evidence. Students will typically work on developing this goal across most of their courses during all four years of their undergraduate education. Why? It is a hard skill to learn. Kialo provides a visual way to see how an argument is constructed and defended, giving you another teaching strategy in your "toolbox".
Body
While argumentation is an important critical thinking skill, students often
struggle with it. Sometimes they think argumentation is a fight they need to win or they become so enamoured with their opinion that they are unable to understand the counter argument.
Kialo is a free web-based tool that scaffolds argumentation by providing a graphical organization of arguments and counter arguments. Students can collaboratively make claims, include links to support their claims, discuss each other’s claims, and vote on the strength (or not) of the various claims.
Take a tour of Kialo to see sample discussions and assignments, as well as a short video.
Ideas for integrating:
- Group Discussions: Assign Kialo discussions for students to work on outside of class, over a week or the whole term. Use Kialo for group discussion to carefully evaluate an argument and/or conclusion in a research paper, article, novel, or other publication.
- Individual: Ask students to organize their arguments and research for a paper in Kialo and hand in as a draft or with the paper.
- Professional: Map the argument for a pre-publication article in Kialo and invite colleagues to give feedback.
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