AICE Thinking Skills Midterm || All Answers Are Correct 100%.
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Course
AICE Thinking
Institution
AICE Thinking
Analyze (command word) correct answers Examine in detail to show meaning, identify elements and the relationship between them
Assess (command word) correct answers Make an informed judgement
Calculate (command word) correct answers Work out from given facts, figures or information
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AICE Thinking Skills Midterm || All Answers Are Correct
100%.
Analyze (command word) correct answers Examine in detail to show meaning, identify elements
and the relationship between them
Assess (command word) correct answers Make an informed judgement
Calculate (command word) correct answers Work out from given facts, figures or information
Compare (command word) correct answers Identify/comment on similarities and/or differences
Evaluate (command word) correct answers Judge or calculate the quality, importance, amount, or
value of something
Explain (command word) correct answers Set out purposes or reasons / make the relationships
between things evident / provide why and/or how and support with relevant evidence
Give (command word) correct answers Produce an answer from a given source or recall/memory
Justify (command word) correct answers Support a case with evidence/argument
Predict (command word) correct answers Suggest what may happen based on available
information
State (command word) correct answers Express in clear terms
Suggest (command word) correct answers Apply knowledge and understanding to situations
where there are a range of valid responses in order to make proposals
Testimony (ch 16 terminology) correct answers A given account or statement that serves as
evidence or proof for a claim, stated by a witness or primary source
Circumstantial Evidence (ch 16 terminology) correct answers A fact, or set of facts, which may
be used to support a conclusion or verdict indirectly
Corroboration (ch 16 terminology) correct answers Confirm or give support to (a statement,
theory, or finding)
Reputation (ch 16 terminology) correct answers The beliefs or opinions that are generally held
about someone or something.
, Perceptual Ability (ch 16 terminology) correct answers The ability to deal with and give meaning
to sensory stimuli
Expertise and Knowledge (ch 16 terminology) correct answers A criterion of reliability for
certain kinds of evidence (must have possession of expertise and knowledge)
Neutrality (ch 16 terminology) correct answers A source must be impartial and with no
possibility of bias or prejudice (essential for assessing credibility)
Vested Interest (ch 16 terminology) correct answers A personal stake or involvement in an
undertaking or state of affairs, especially one with an expectation of financial gain
Consistency (ch 16 terminology) correct answers Conformity in the application of something,
typically that which is necessary for the sake of logic, accuracy, or fairness (claims do not
contradict / claims validate one another)
Equivocation (fallacy of logic) correct answers Concealing a step in reasoning by tactically
shifting from one meaning of a word or expression to another
Conflation (fallacy of logic) correct answers Concealing a step in reasoning by treating two
words or expressions as if they were interchangeable even though their meanings are different
Circular Argument (fallacy of logic) correct answers Relying on a claim in order to prove it
Begging The Question (fallacy of logic) correct answers Focusing an argument on an
uncontroversial aspect of an issue while stipulating or assuming the key point
Invalid Deduction (fallacy of logic) correct answers Affirming the consequent or denying the
antecedent
Causal Flaw (fallacy of logic) correct answers Claiming that just because one event or
phenomenon follows another or is accompanied by another, it must be caused by the other
Rash Generalization (fallacy of logic) correct answers Basing a generalization on inadequate
evidence
Sweeping Generalization (fallacy of logic) correct answers Not allowing for exceptions to a
generalization
Restriction of Options - False Dichotomy (fallacy of logic) correct answers Denying the
possibility of moderate opinions or actions in order to claim that anyone who rejects one extreme
must accept its opposite
Confusion of Necessary and Sufficient Conditions (fallacy of logic) correct answers Interpreting
a necessary condition as if it were sufficient or a sufficient condition as if it were necessary
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