An elementary school teacher early in his career, Roland Case has since made it his life’s work to study how reasoning is taught in elementary and secondary school classrooms and to provide teachers with the tools to integrate critical thinking skills into all subject areas.
One of the founders of The Critical Thinking Consortium (TC2), Case is the driving intellectual and organizational force behind the group. Over the past 10 years, he has authored or co-authored 19 teacher resource guides, and made over 300 academic, professional and community presentations in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and India.
Rather than viewing critical thinking as a stand alone skill, Case seeks to develop students’ abilities to make sound judgments within the context of the subject matter being taught. In this way, critical thinking becomes more than a learning objective in and of itself-it becomes a “way of life” in the classroom.
Over the last four years, the Consortium, under Case’s leadership, has focused on publishing and disseminating teaching resources for British Columbia’s elementary and secondary social studies curriculum. Twenty-three teams of teachers drafted, tested, and refined the equivalent of a lesson plan in social studies for every day of the year from Kindergarten to Grade 11.
The power of Case’s vision is evident in the enthusiasm expressed by academics and practitioners alike. Although his work has strong theoretical roots, its practical application has had an immeasurable effect on student learning and broadened the approaches to teaching of literally thousands of educators.