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Campus talks: are we facing a crisis in critical thinking in higher education?

Two academic experts in strategic decision-making and education discuss critical thinking, why it is under threat and what role it plays in preparing students for their digitally curated futures

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HEC Paris,Learning Policy Institute
7 Aug 2025
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Critical thinking is one of the most lauded graduate skill sets, praised by academics, sought after by employers and upheld as a solution to many contemporary challenges, from AI to polarisation. 

But are universities equipping students with the capabilities and mindset needed to properly question information and assumptions, to self-reflect, overcome biases, analyse, empathise and reason? And if not, what could higher education do differently?

To find out, in this podcast episode, we speak to two experts in education and strategic decision-making:

Olivier Sibony is an affiliate professor at the business school HEC Paris and a specialist in strategic decision-making and the role that heuristics and biases play in this. Olivier spent 24 years as a management consultant with McKinsey and Company in New York, Paris and Brussels and has produced hit books including You‘re About to Make a Terrible Mistake in 2020 and Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment in 2021, which he co-wrote with Nobel prizewinner Daniel Kahnemen and Cass R. Sunstein. 

Tony Wagner is a senior research fellow at the Learning Policy Institute, US. Prior to this, Tony worked at Harvard University for more than 20 years, as expert-in-residence at the Harvard Innovation Lab and the founder and co-director of the Change Leadership Group at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He has also worked as a high school teacher, a K-8 principal, university professor and founding executive director of Educators for Social Responsibility. And he is the author of eight books, with his next, Mastery: Why Deeper Learning is Essential in an Age of Distraction, published in September.

In these interviews, we break critical thinking down into its component parts, discuss its role in quality decision-making, why it can be so challenging and why contemporary education systems need a rethink if they are to truly equip students to think independently amid the flood of digital information with which they are bombarded daily.

For more practical insight and advice on teaching and practising critical thinking in higher education, go to our latest spotlight guide: Critical thinking in teaching and research

If you would like advice and insight from academics and university staff delivered direct to your inbox each week, sign up for the Campus newsletter.

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