The Role of Teaching Christian Religious Education to the Development of Critical Thinking Amongst Kenyan Secondary School Students in Kisumu East District, Kenya
Publication Date
2012Author
Kowino., Joash Obwana
Agak, J.O.
Kochung., J.E.
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
Previous research has consistently reported that Kenyan students’ moral standing and general
conduct in the wider society reflects incompetence in critical thinking. The scenario in which
irrational behavior has dominated the character of the Kenyan youth has brought to contention
whether the moral well being of the youth is on a downward trend suggesting that either the
teaching of critical thinking through C.R.E is defective or the Kenyan education system as a
whole is defective. Another possibility is that the syllabus does not contain relevant elements
that could enable students acquire and develop the needed critical thinking skills. One other
likelihood could be the existence of a discrepancy between the C.R.E program objectives and
the instructional practices meant to achieve them. From the forgoing, it was evident that the
nature of this discrepancy is yet to be established for effective intervention strategies to be put
in place to arrest the apparent downward trend in the acquisition of moral critical thinking
skills. Specifically the study determined whether or not aspects of critical thinking skills are
employed by teachers in their (teachers) instructional practices in Kisumu East district
secondary schools. Four instruments used in collecting data included: a graphic-observation
rating scale, a learners’ critical thinking achievement test, an in-depth interview schedule and
documents analysis guide. The study population comprised 48 teachers and 3225 students. Out
of the total population of 3273, 16 teachers and 343 learners were selected using simple
random sampling technique. The obtained results suggested that teachers rarely used the
elements of critical thinking skills that could enable the learner make accurate moral decisions.
Another notable finding was that the curriculum and the syllabus guides did not elaborate on
the elements of critical thinking skills that teachers ought to use during C.R.E content delivery.