Six Thinking Hats

Six Thinking Hats

Activity Overview

Groups examine a topic from six perspectives represented by colored hats: facts, emotions, caution, benefits, creativity, and process management.

Grade Levels

5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceEnglishHistory

Activity Types

CollaborativeDiscussionAnalytical

Detailed Example

Analyzing a Policy Decision (History/Science - 8th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • Colored paper hats or hat cards in six colors
  • Six Thinking Hats reference chart
  • Discussion recording sheet
  • Topic background information

Preparation

Create or purchase colored hats/cards for each color. Make reference chart explaining each hat. Select a complex topic with multiple valid perspectives. Plan timing for each hat.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Introduce Six Thinking Hats (Edward de Bono): A way to examine issues from multiple perspectives.

2.

Explain each hat:

White Hat

Facts only. What do we know? What data exists?

Red Hat

Emotions. How do you feel? Gut reactions? (No justification needed)

Black Hat

Caution. What could go wrong? Risks? Problems?

Yellow Hat

Benefits. What's good about this? Opportunities?

Green Hat

Creativity. New ideas? Alternatives? What if?

Blue Hat

Process. Are we on track? What's next? Summary?

3.

Topic: 'Our city is considering banning single-use plastics.'

4.

Everyone wears the same hat at the same time. Start with White (facts).

5.

White Hat (3 min): Only share facts - no opinions. 'Plastic takes 500 years to decompose.'

6.

Red Hat (2 min): Share feelings. 'I feel frustrated about pollution.'

7.

Continue through each hat, blue hat periodically checking process.

8.

Yellow and Black together (5 min): List benefits, then concerns.

9.

Green Hat (5 min): Creative alternatives and new ideas.

10.

Blue Hat conclusion: What did we learn by examining this from all angles?

Differentiation Strategies

Assign specific hats to students who struggle with perspective-taking. Provide starter sentences for each hat. For advanced students, have them lead the blue hat process management.

Assessment Guidelines

Evaluate thoroughness of each perspective. Note if students can genuinely adopt unfamiliar viewpoints. Check that process hat keeps discussion productive. Use recorded notes for understanding.

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