Abstract

This article illustrates how the generic employability skills approach to critical thinking suffers from serious conceptual and epistemological difficulties that impact deleteriously on both its practical effectiveness and democratic appropriateness. Unlike technical skills, employability skills, in this case cognitive capacities such as critical thinking and problem solving, are traditionally presented as not job specific, and are intended to remain broadly applicable across a variety of occupations and professions. The emphasis that career education places on technical rationality in critical thinking violates principles of democratic learning by disregarding the historical context of vocational experience. Within career education, critical thinking conceived as technical rationality refers to means/end reasoning that pursues human capital and business objectives with the maximum possible effectiveness. This article proposes that a more effective, politically empowering, and epistemically coherent approach to critical thinking promotes student understanding of the various forces shaping contemporary vocational experience. Finally, this article proposes a revised critical thinking construct based on foundational rationality to remedy these problems, and offers examples of concrete classroom strategies, such as praxis, problem-posing education and collaborative learning, that protect democratic learning in career education programs.

Highlights

  • Consistent with the human capital requirements of economic globalization, many secondary level career education programs are designed with the intention of preparing students for the formidable challenges, such as employment instability, marking contemporary vocational experience (Hyslop-Margison & Graham, 2003; Spring, 1998)

  • We argue that the emphasis career education places on technical rationality in critical thinking violates principles of democratic learning (Hyslop-Margison & Graham, 2003) by disregarding the historical context of vocational experience

  • In the final section of the article, we propose a revised critical thinking construct based on foundational rationality to remedy these problems, and offer examples of concrete classroom strategies that protect democratic learning in career education programs

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Consistent with the human capital requirements of economic globalization, many secondary level career education programs are designed with the intention of preparing students for the formidable challenges, such as employment instability, marking contemporary vocational experience (Hyslop-Margison & Graham, 2003; Spring, 1998). The majority of these programs advocate teaching students transferable, or generic, critical thinking and problem solving “skills” that are intended to address the occupational instability marking current labor market conditions (Kerka, 1993). In the final section of the article, we propose a revised critical thinking construct based on foundational rationality to remedy these problems, and offer examples of concrete classroom strategies that protect democratic learning in career education programs

Conceptual Problems with Critical Thinking in Career Education
TECHNICAL RATIONALITY AND CRITICAL THINKING
CRITICAL THINKING IN DEMOCRATIC CAREER EDUCATION
CONCLUSION
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