Acquiring critical* thinking skills and their relationship to decision-making skill among graduates of the American Institute (YALI) in Yemen: A case study

Authors

  • Arwa Abdullah Ahmad Farae

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35696/.v1i17.690

Keywords:

critical thinking, decision making, argument, evaluate, analysis and extended argument

Abstract

The study aims at finding out the type of relationship between the acquisition of critical thinking skills (evaluation, analysis and extending argument) and the decision-making skill among the graduate students of Yemen America Language Institute (YALI) 2018-2019. The study sample was was 60 students. The number of respondents was 46 students. The response rate amounted to 76.6%. The (CAAP) Critical Thinking Test, which included 32 items, was used measure students' critical thinking skills. The tool which was used to measure decision-making skills consists of 19 items distributed into 6 sections. The study reached a number of findings. One of the main findings was that the level of critical thinking of the students was weak. The results of the study also showed an average level of decision-making skill. The results also indicated in general to the absence of a statistically significant correlation between critical thinking skills and decision-making skills. This is consistent with what the current study assumed. The researcher recommended that it is necessary for educational institutions to teach critical thinking skills in a systematic way from the primary stage.

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Published

2020-12-01

How to Cite

Farae, A. A. A. . (2020). Acquiring critical* thinking skills and their relationship to decision-making skill among graduates of the American Institute (YALI) in Yemen: A case study. Journal of Arts, 1(17), 7–56. https://doi.org/10.35696/.v1i17.690

Issue

Section

1

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