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Eleven Types of Thinking Skills You Should Develop For Success

1. Critical thinking.

This is the analysis of available facts, evidence, observations, and arguments to form a judgment. It includes the rational, skeptical unbiased analysis or evaluation of factual evidence.

2. Creative Thinking.

This is the ability to conceive new and innovative ideas by breaking away from established thoughts, theories, rules, and procedures. It involves putting things together in new and imaginative ways.

3. Concrete Thinking.

This is the ability to comprehend and apply factual knowledge. It is about thinking of objects and ideas as specific items, rather than as a theoretical representation of a more general concept. It involves thinking on the surface, literal and to the point

4. Abstract Thinking.

This is the ability to use concepts to make and understand generalizations, then relate or connect them to other items, events, or experiences. It involves paying attention to the hidden meanings thus allowing you to understand theories and possibilities

5. Divergent Thinking.

The ability to generate creative ideas by exploring many possible solutions to find one that works. It involves bringing data and facts together from various sources and then applying logic and knowledge to solve problems and make decisions.

6. Convergent Thinking.

This is the ability to put several different pieces or perspectives of a topic together in some organized, logical manner, to find a single answer. It involves focusing on a finite number of solutions rather than proposing multiple solutions.

7. Abstract Thinking.

This is the ability to relate seemingly random things with each other and make connections others find difficult to see.

8. Analytical Thinking.

This is the ability to have a structured and methodical way of approaching tasks. It is the ability to take something whole and separate it into basic parts to be examined.

9. Open Mindedness.

This is the ability to analyze and process information to come to an unbiased conclusion. Part of the critical thinking process is letting your personal biases go and coming to a conclusion based on all of the information.

10. Decision-making.

Decision-making is the step beyond evaluation. Once you pass judgment on information, you then decide what to do next.

11. Reflective Thinking.

This involves deep reflection of past experiences combined with your knowledge and thinking skills. Reflective thinking is used to solve complex problems. Reflective thinking helps you avoid hasty and impulsive decisions.

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