Pedagogy of Social Science • Topic 2 of 4

Critical Thinking & Inquiry

The heart of modern social science pedagogy is moving the child from passive memoriser to active investigator. Critical thinking means the ability to reason, analyse, compare, evaluate evidence and question assumptions rather than accept information as given -- a student who asks 'who wrote this and why?' is thinking critically. The inquiry approach (also called the discovery or problem-solving approach) treats the child as a researcher: a genuine question is raised, evidence is gathered from sources, the evidence is analysed, and a conclusion is reasoned out from the evidence rather than stated by the teacher. This is why empirical evidence matters -- conclusions in social science should rest on data, sources and observation, not on opinion or hearsay. In the classroom this shows up as discussion, debate, role play, case studies, analysing newspaper reports, and open-ended questions that have no single 'textbook' answer. Classroom discourse should be dialogic: the teacher asks higher-order 'why', 'how' and 'what if' questions, encourages multiple viewpoints, and lets children argue respectfully. CTET rewards the answer that promotes reasoning, discussion and evidence over the one that promotes recall and copying notes. A discussion on a controversial social issue is valued because it builds reasoning and tolerance for other viewpoints, even when no single right answer exists.

✅ Solved examples

1. A social science teacher who wants to develop critical thinking should mainly ask questions that:
Require reasoning, analysis and judgement -- 'why', 'how' and 'what if' questions -- rather than questions that only test recall of facts and dates.
2. In the inquiry (discovery) approach to social science, the conclusion to a problem is:
Reasoned out by the students from the evidence they gather and analyse, with the teacher as a guide -- not simply announced by the teacher for children to copy.
3. Why does NCF 2005 encourage classroom discussion and debate on social issues?
Because discussion builds critical thinking, reasoning and tolerance for different viewpoints; the process of arguing from evidence matters even when there is no single correct answer.
4. Insisting that students support their claims about a historical event with evidence from sources rather than with opinion reflects which feature of social science inquiry?
The empirical / evidence-based nature of the subject -- conclusions must be grounded in data and sources, not in hearsay or personal belief.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. An approach in which the child acts as an investigator -- raising a question, collecting evidence and drawing conclusions -- is the:
Also called discovery or problem-solving.
Child as researcher.
Inquiry approach
2. A teacher asks, 'What might have happened if the revolt had succeeded?' This open-ended question mainly develops:
Goes beyond recall.
Reasoning about possibilities.
Critical and higher-order thinking
3. Role play, debate, case studies and analysing newspaper reports are valued because they:
Not passive copying.
Active engagement and reasoning.
Promote active, inquiry-based critical thinking
4. Classroom talk in which the teacher invites multiple viewpoints and students reason together is best described as:
Two-way, not one-way lecture.
Dialogue-based.
Dialogic / discussion-based discourse

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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