Teaching Formal Logic
-
Lessons
Lesson 1: Teaching Logic Restfully with Rigor (Preview Content)4 Topics|1 Quiz -
Lesson 2: Logic as a Core Discipline (Preview Content)3 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Discussion: Logic in One's Life and Study (Preview Content)2 Topics
-
Lesson 3: Formal Logic vs. Informal Logic4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 4: The Classical Origin and Medieval Recovery of Logic4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 5: Formal Logic and the Three Acts of the Mind (Preview Content)4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 6: Translating Arguments into Categorical Form4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 7: Relationships of Opposition4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 8: Relationships of Equivalence4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 9: Categorical Syllogisms3 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 10: Determining Validity of Syllogisms3 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 11: Terms and Definitions3 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 12: Developing the End-of-Year Project4 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Discovery of Deduction Sample LessonsLesson 13: Chapter 5.2 The Square of Opposition2 Topics|1 Quiz
-
Lesson 14: Chapter 6.5 The Relationship of Contraposition2 Topics|1 Quiz
-
End of Course TestEnd of Course Test: Teaching Formal Logic1 Quiz
Assignments and Action Steps
Create a student self-diagnosis questionnaire containing some introspective questions particularly pertinent to the students’ discovering:
(1) Whether they engage with content on this level
(2) A range of ways they could possibly engage with the content on this level
(3) Numbers assigned to the increasing (or decreasing) ability level of engagement. Provide the students with some guided discussion to preface each question.
The goal of this assignment should be multifaceted:
(1) To inform students that there is a direct correlation between their ability to engage with material and their future success as scholars
(2) To help students determine their own academic maturity as a way to aid them in becoming scholars, logicians, and writers
(3) To help students see the range of, and possible growth options along the continuum of, understanding these concepts. They may not realize the significance of understanding how to think.