The OPTIONAL Instructor Access Grading Service is available for this course!

Learn to think critically in our “information age,” understand history and current events, and make good decisions while living out your Catholic faith with wisdom.

          Image: Karl Jaspers, a 20th century theologian and scholar who pioneered important concepts, such as the Axial Age

How to get the most out of Critical Thinking, Catholicism, and History  with Christopher Martin, Ph.D.:

  • Download the pre-course materials (e.g., syllabus) found at the end of the course introduction, but before the weekly materials.

  • Review the week's PowerPoint slides before watching the recorded class meeting
  • Do the reading before watching the recorded class meeting
  • Have a notebook ready and available for class notes while watching the recording
  • Watch the recorded class meeting

  • Do the assignments, quizzes, and any extra work assigned for that day.
  • Repeat the above for each day.

  • Once the course is completed to the parent's and professor’s satisfaction, there is a Certificate of Completion at the end to be filled in for your records.

Total classes: 8

Duration: 55 minutes

Prerequisite: None

Suggested grade level: 9th to 12th grade. Middle school students are welcome with adjustments to the assignments. 

Suggested credit: 1/3 semester History, Philosophy, or Critical Thinking

Instructor: Christopher Martin, PhD

Instructor email: chrisgooverthere@yahoo.com

Course Description:

Modern sources of news and entertainment are cleverly designed to compel, persuade, sensationalize, and attract attention. The purpose of this class is twofold: to both teach students how to think critically about the information they encounter, as well as how to construct well-written arguments with appropriate, supporting source material. Few people in our society realize that the true benefit of studying history goes beyond the simple lessons of the past. Rather, by giving critical analysis to the interpretations of the past, students can themselves learn to identify and scrutinize sources of information and form their own opinions with greater wisdom. 

Course Outline:

Day 1: Introduction and overview of syllabus and assignments; Introductory probe into the scope and utility of History.

Days 2-5: Thinking Critically

Day 2: Historical and Ideological 

Day 3: Primary and Secondary Sources

Day 4: Causation, Contingency, and Complexity

Day 5: Active, Critical Reading

Days 6-8: Arguing Persuasively

Day 6: Historiography and Historians' Fallacies

Day 7: Thesis Statements, and Supporting an Argument

Day 8: The Catholic Theology of History

Course materials: Historiographical Reviews, by Christopher Martin (eBook)

Can be purchased here for $16.50: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=YAVUPX2WPB9YY (No PayPal account needed. Click on “Pay with Debit or Credit Card”.)

Homework: 

-Less than 10 pages, per day, of optional reading from the textbook

-NOTE: Middle school students are exempt from the readings

-Students will compose a 2-3 page exercise in historical-critical analysis and review

-NOTE: Middle school students will instead take a multiple choice quiz version of the critical analysis of the select reading 

-Daily, optional review quizzes based on classroom lectures and discussions. Worth bonus points.