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Title
Critical thinking
Category
general
UUID
ace20aaccc934675be58cdf659dfab26
Source URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/key-study-skills/critical-thinking/
Parent URL
https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T03:21:38+00:00
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Critical thinking

Source: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/key-study-skills/critical-thinking/ Parent: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/

  1. Home  » 2. Key study skills

Critical thinking

Critical thinking allows you to go beyond a superficial understanding of your course material, write better assignments and better evaluate your own work.

A critical thinker is able to evaluate and analyse arguments objectively and come to a reasoned conclusion based on the information presented to them. Critical thinking is an active learning process.

When is critical thinking important?

Critical thinking is particularly important at university. It is also reflected in the University of Auckland graduate capabilities.

When you transition to university the expectations of how you approach information and ideas will change. Listen to what University of Auckland students have observed about this shift.

Critical thinking at University – video transcript

“Graduates of the University are expected to be able to contest knowledge and practice, critically consider ideas, texts and research and think reflectively and reflexively.”

Critical thinking can be applied to any endeavour and is particularly sought after by employers who want staff who can logically evaluate a situation or problem and come up with well-reasoned solutions.

What is critical thinking?

Learn more about what critical thinking involves at university by watching the video below.

What is Critical Thinking – video transcript

There are a few key techniques you can employ to think critically:

Reading critically will allow you to better understand and engage with your course content and help you make sense of more difficult texts.

Try the following:

Ask questions:

Writing at university requires more than regurgitation of facts and figures. Your written assignments need to present logical well-thought-out arguments, backed up by evidence, as well as your own thoughts and opinions.

A common trap you can fall into is writing descriptively. Descriptive writing presents the history, background or facts about a situation but no critical analysis. While descriptive writing can provide context and set the scene at the beginning of your essay or assignment, relying solely on descriptive writing will most likely lose you marks.

See Descriptive vs Critical writing examples

How can you apply Critical Thinking in assignments?

In your academic work, your lecturers will be looking to see if you can:

For more information and tips, visit the Reading Critically module on the Academic English Hub.

Workshops

See all available workshops.

Short on time? Watch a video on:

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