Reading
People: Non-Verbal Communication
Non Verbal Reasoning Skills September, 2005, by The Critical Thinking Co.™ Staff
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As anyone who has traveled to a foreign
land with only a very limited knowledge
of the local language can tell you,
verbal skills are only half of the
pie. Even though speech is the most
obvious form of communication, we
are constantly bombarded with non-verbal
cues and required to decipher non-verbal
symbols every day. As important as
verbal skills and reasoning are, non-verbal
reasoning skills are just as important.
Non-verbal reasoning involves drawing
conclusions based on a set of givens.
Exercises include activities like
describing the similarities and differences
between two pictures, finding the
shape that does not belong in a sequence
of shapes, predicting what shape should
next appear in the sequence, and so
on. Non-verbal reasoning exercises
can also include numerical and aural
activities, where non-speech sounds
must be matched, differentiated, or
compared and contrasted.
Practicing non-verbal reasoning is
important because it forces the brain
to use resources other than those
that respond to speech and the written
word. Non-verbal reasoning serves
to reinforce verbal reasoning by emphasizing
the type of thinking involved apart
from the verbal default. Both verbal
and non-verbal reasoning should be
practiced regularly--and not just
because they show up on standardized
tests.
Critical thinking is the use of logic
and reason to evaluate a set of known
information to discover the correct
solution, accept or reject a given
argument, or make an appropriate decision.
Not coincidentally, critical thinking
is behind everything The Critical
Thinking Co. develops. Our products
are used in homes and top-performing
high schools around the country because
they yield results.
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