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The Theory of Knowledge (TOK) is a part of the IB curriculum, specifically positioned as the core of the curriculum.
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TOK aims to:
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- Encourage students to reflect on their own thinking in a meta-cognitive (≒objective) way.
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- Provide students with a framework for such thinking.
- By providing a systematic framework, TOK ensures that meta-cognitive approaches are not biased towards certain areas of knowledge, covering both humanities and sciences.
- If There is a Framework, You Can Recognize the Blank Space Enclosed by the Framework
- For example, when watching the news and feeling uncomfortable with a statement made by a politician, TOK encourages students to consider why they felt that way.
- Was it because there was a logical error in the statement?
- Was it because the statement conflicted with their own beliefs?
- Was it because there is shared knowledge that suggests the statement is suspicious?
- Students are encouraged to think about such questions.
- (If you can think of other examples that would be easier to understand when explaining to non-IB students, please write them down @(axokxi)(aka))
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Knowledge Questions (KQs) encourage meta-cognitive thinking.
- Instead of asking “what do we know,” KQs ask “how do we know.”
- For example, in the context of ethics, instead of discussing whether the death penalty is good or bad, students would consider how judgments about the death penalty are made.
- Instead of focusing on the theory of relativity itself, students would explore how Einstein arrived at his theory.
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There is a Knowledge Framework for each of the six Areas of Knowledge (AOKs).
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Developing KQs is a training in abstraction.
- It is more about generalization.
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Summarize in Tips for TOK Essay.
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TOK Essays seem to be just presenting four cases (RLS) and stating opinions without much evidence.
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It seems limited to only showing that a claim is true in one case and false in another case.
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Well, maybe it’s training to connect real events with general meta-topics.
- If that’s the case, I think it has great value.
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http://ib.compscihub.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/IBCompSciGuide.pdf
- The study guide discusses the connection between Computer Science and TOK.#informationscience
- The theme is very interesting and can be used as a reference when thinking about TOK Presentations.
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Learning about WOK in TOK was a turning point that made me reconsider my previous belief in logical thinking supremacy.
- It’s just one of the seven concepts.
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As a learning experience in TOK, I feel that “expertise includes not only knowledge but also skills (methodology)” is important.
- Gaining knowledge does not automatically make one an expert (a quiz champion is not necessarily a super expert).
- In a way, this seems to be the difference between IB subjects and regular subjects (not only knowledge).
- IB History: Developing critical perspectives
- IB Sciences: Developing the ability to set up experiments
- Realizing this, I once again think that TOK is truly at the core of the IB.
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Also, I feel that I have gained the skill of consciously considering the premises and definitions when constructing logic and arguments.
- It’s about explicitly thinking about definitions and premises that would otherwise be ambiguous.
- This seems particularly useful when thinking through Language.