Foundation Tier

The foundation modules are three modules which prepare students for later work in the University Scholars Programme. They consist of modules in Writing & Critical Thinking, Quantitative Reasoning, and the University Scholars Seminar. You are encouraged to take these modules early in your USP career, and should aim to finish all three modules before the end of your second academic year at NUS.

Writing and Critical Thinking

(to be read in 1st or 2nd semester of enrollment)
Modules in this area will help you read and think critically, engage with texts rather than simply repeating them, and to write persuasively. Each module is organised around a series of fascinating questions that you will investigate from a variety of disciplinary perspectives.

Writing and Critical Thinking (WCT) is a foundational academic domain in the USP.

Critical Thinking: A General Definition

Critical thinking is the ability to think clearly, logically and systematically. When we think critically, we try not to rely on intuitions or personal feelings. Within the context of higher education, critical thinking skills enable us to, among other things: [1]

  • analyse arguments’ soundness and evaluate whether a writer or speaker establishes a claim on good grounds (i.e. reasoning and evidence)
  • construct arguments and develop reasons in support of what we believe
  • identify and evaluate objections to arguments
  • draw out implications to a conclusion
  • construct a problem to investigate
  • evaluate between alternative ways of approaching a question, and answering a question
  • discover and overcome prejudices and biases
  • reflect on our thinking and suspend judgment when necessary
  • become aware of the sources and purposes of various bodies of knowledge, in other words, being able to respond to the question “how do we know what we know?”

[1] Some of the following points came from David Hitchcock’s account of critical thinking.  See his “Critical Thinking as Educational Ideal,” in On Reasoning and Argument: Essays in Informal Logic and on Critical Thinking (Springer, 2017), 477-497.

How WCT Develops Critical Thinking Skills

As a foundational class in the Humanities and Social Sciences Domain of the USP curriculum, WCT is particularly suitable in developing critical thinking skills, because students repeatedly engage in three activities: (1) evaluating arguments, (2) constructing new arguments and (3) revising their arguments. 

Evaluating Arguments

In WCT, students encounter arguments in assigned readings and in class discussions.  When students evaluate arguments, they practise critical thinking in the following ways.

  1. determining whether the claim is supported by adequate grounds: students’ primary job is to examine if a given claim is backed up by good reasoning and evidence.[2]
  2. determining if there are counter-arguments: in cases where students would like to contest a claim, they can challenge it intrinsically by raising problems about the grounds of the claim (e.g., they can charge that the evidence does not support the claim), or extrinsically by raising problems about other concerns (e.g. they can query a potential consequence of the claim).
  3. drawing out implications: some students may go a step further, to infer an established claim’s implications.[3]

 

Constructing arguments

The exercise of critical thinking skills in WCT lies beyond evaluating an argument’s validity and significance. When students draft academic arguments or arguments for a broader audience, they are developing their critical thinking skills in the following ways:

  1. constructing a research question: students have to formulate a viable question and justify why it is worth asking.
  2. considering different approaches to answering the research question: students need to grasp that there may often be more than one way to answer any question but also to evaluate which option is the most suitable.
  3. arguing for the validity of a thesis or main claim (in response to the research question): students have to be able to provide good reasons and evidence as grounds for the claim.
  4. collecting evidence: students have to determine which types of evidence to collect (e.g. first-hand data, interviews, scholarly essays).  In cases where they are engaging in human subjects research, students need to reflect on how their engagement with the human subjects can have implications for both the types of data gathered and the conclusion that they can draw from the data.
  5. evaluating evidence: students have to evaluate the relevance and strength of the varied types of evidence.
  6. organising arguments: students have to determine how to break down their thesis into different component parts and organise the different strands of argument systematically.
  7. anticipating and responding to objections: as a way to strengthen an argument, students need to anticipate objections and respond them to them. This process entails constructing counter-arguments, evaluating which counter-argument(s) to respond to, and finally, responding to them.

 

Revising Arguments

Last but not least, the process of revising drafts helps students develop meta-cognition, that is, the ability to think about, assess and improve their own thinking.  Re-thinking and re-working a draft helps students reflect on how they have constructed the research question, argue for their claims, organize their arguments, clarify their concepts, and identify their struggles.  By prompting students to analyze their own thinking, this reflective process develops students’ self-awareness in employing and evaluating their critical thinking skills. 

 

[2] The basic model of a claim, whereby a claim should be supported by grounds, came from the classical accounts of argumentation and reasoning by Stephen Toulmin.  Wayne Booth further specifies the model by suggesting that a claim should rest on reasons which are in turn grounded on evidence.  See Stephen Toulmin, Richard Rieke & Allan Janik, An Introduction to Reasoning, 2nd ed. (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1978, 1984), 23-78 and Stephen E. Toulmin, The Uses of Argument, updated ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 87-131; and Wayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb & Joseph M. Williams, The Craft of Research, 3rd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008), 108-112.

[3] The idea that critical thinking does not only consist in examining the basis of a claim, but also in drawing out further implications, came from Dewey’s well-known statement: “Active, persistent and careful consideration of a belief or supposed form of knowledge in light of the grounds that support it, and the further conclusions to which it tends.”  While Dewey called it “reflective thinking,” scholars and educators have generally taken it to be a classic account of critical thinking. See his How We Think: A Restatement of the Relation of Reflective Thinking to the Educative Process (Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 1933), 9.

Critical Thinking and Interdisciplinary Studies

Finally, as a foundational class supporting USP’s interdisciplinary mission, WCT develops students’ capacity to discern a variety disciplinary approaches, theories, and methods, to see the ways such theoretical frameworks shape how a question is formulated, to understand what constitutes data or evidence for each, and ultimately to thereby learn how knowledge is constructed among different disciplines.

Programme Outcomes
This is our set of outcomes: the things we would like our students to learn in the Writing and Critical Thinking Programme.

Core WCT Outcomes

Students should be able to:

  • demonstrate the ability to analyse evidence that is both genre- and audience-appropriate
  • write with a clear purpose and focus so as to participate in interdisciplinary academic inquiry
  • participate in scholarly conversations through intellectual engagement with secondary texts

Core WCT Policies

  • Each class requires 18-22 pages of polished prose.
  • WCT instructors emphasise process-based pedagogies, including conferences, peer reviews, and multiple drafts for each writing assignment.
  • Instructors will hold 2-6 conferences with every student in the class.
  • Each class will conduct peer reviews. These can cover a range: from informal peer-review activities, to up to 3 formal peer reviews.
  • Writing assignments cover at least 2 genres. In the longer term faculty will emphasise genre pedagogies.
  • At least 1 of the genres covered is the researched argument. Students will learn to do library research and credit sources properly.
  • All formal writing assignments go through revision and reflection processes, which means that there are at least 2 drafts per formal assignment.
  • Instructors will provide rigorous feedback on students’ writing. This can take a variety of forms, for example written or video feedback, or a combination of both as appropriate in the instructor’s view.
  • The teaching load consists of 2 sections per semester so that faculty can sustain a high level of personalised, intensive, hands-on instruction and feedback to students. For the same reasons, class size is capped at 12 students per section.
  • Faculty should be able to choose from a range of handbooks.

The Writing Centre
Staffed by trained student assistants, the Writing Centre offers one-on-one conferences to students who are writing papers for any USP module. Visit Writing Centre website HERE.

Folio
An annual journal published by the Writing Programme, folio showcases the best student essays produced in our University Scholars Writing & Critical Thinking modules. Read the folio essays HERE.

Related Web Resources

A list of resources to help writers on various subjects, ranging from writing for specific disciplines, to research, to citation and stylistic matters.

For the full list of WCT Programme Outcomes, please see: http://www.usp.nus.edu.sg/curriculum/academic-structure/foundation-tier/wct-programme-outcomes

Quantitative Reasoning Foundation

The Quantitative Reasoning Foundation (QRF) module introduces students to the basics of quantitative reasoning, defined broadly as "the way in which we can use numbers to provide evidence for our arguments." It does so by examining a specific substantive topic whose claims can be assessed quantitatively. Such substantive topics include: evaluating our individual eco-footprint (UQF2101E), quantifying nuclear risk (UQF2101G) or environmental quality (UQF2101I), and assessing the relationship between democracy and war(UQF2101H). Each module section is limited to 25 students.

In taking the module, students will gain an appreciation that, for many questions/issues, a quantitative analysis can provide the insight and clarity that complements and moves beyond what might be gained through a qualitative approach. QRF also helps prepare students for Inquiry-tier modules in the USP Sciences and Technologies Domain. The module is required for all USP students entering the program in Sem1 of AY 2012/13 or later. USP students are required to take QRF within their first three semesters of enrolling.

Programme Outcomes

Upon completion of the QRF, students should be able to:

  • Understand and be able to articulate the basic intuition and logic that undergirds quantitative analyses.
  • Demonstrate how this logic can be applicable to questions in their own fields of study.
  • Become more critical consumers of quantitative knowledge through their increasing ability to read, interpret, and think critically about the use of numbers in the material they encounter daily.
  • Discuss the purpose, strengths, and weaknesses of quantitative analysis, both in the abstract, and in the consideration of any given particular phenomenon, issue, or question.

More specifically, students should be able to:

  • Name the steps of the scientific method as it applies to quantitative research, describe the relevant tasks associated with each step, and be able to perform these tasks correctly.
  • Have a particular awareness of (1) the role that theoretical concepts and their empirical operationalization play in the research process; and (2) the importance of “falsifiability”.
  • Be able to: (1) build datasets by gathering and organizing numerical data, (2) compute basic descriptive statistics, (3) perform basic statistical analyses (in the form of linear regression), and (4) interpret the descriptive statistics and regression results.
  • Have familiarity with the concept of “significance,” in the statistical sense, and be able to explain why it is central to the very notion of quantitative reasoning.

Each QRF module will also have Learning Objectives that are unique to the module’s substantive topic, to encourage students to connect specific knowledge of the substantive topic with the above QR objectives.

 

The QR Centre

The QR Centre provides help primarily to USP students currently reading the QRF module. Yet, it also invites USP students, regardless of whether they are reading a QRF module, to work on QR-related assignments in the Centre. There is no need for appointment for the QR Centre. All USP students can just drop in anytime during the Centre’s operating hours. Check for details at http://blog.nus.edu.sg/qrcentre/ or read about its launch.

University Scholars Seminar

Overarching goal: To begin to develop your ability to recognise potential problems and needs more readily and with greater accuracy than others.

Key words: Intellectual curiosity, Reflective learning, Exposure to multi-disciplinarity

What to expect: You will be treated to a four-fold stroll through big ideas on human inquiry and the nature of the world. Four different professors will introduce you to, and help you reflect upon the different modes of inquiry that constitute the modern knowledge enterprise.

Learning Outcome:

1. USS is (part of) the beginning of your USP academic journey, a goal of which is ultimately to shape independent, adaptable thinkers and doers who will make an impact in the world. And to do that, we want to help you develop your ability to recognize potential problems and needs more readily; with greater accuracy than others.

2. USS serves the larger goals of the USP academic journey by treating you to a four-fold stroll through big ideas on human inquiry and the nature of the world, where four different instructors with different intellectual backgrounds will introduce to, and help you reflect upon different modes of inquiry that constitute the modern knowledge enterprise.

3. By introducing you to these ideas, we seek to leverage upon your existing curiosity in subjects that go beyond your specializations, and also to encourage you to seek out new things to learn. You might have a stronger background in the sciences or in the humanities, but as USP students, we know that you have wider intellectual ambitions—and USS is here to give you a taste of that wider field.

4. We also want you to reflect upon what you learn. The point of the modulets is not deep specialization (the majors are for that); rather, we want to show you how we can and ought to make critical audits of our knowledge, views, and approaches to understanding the world around you. The day will come when the reflection thing becomes the main point—in the capstone USR. The USS is the just the start of the process that will take you there.

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