Governance becomes sustainable only when:

  1. It is effectively and efficiently responsive to the present and future needs of society.
  2. The political system secures inclusiveness and effective citizen participation in decision making
  3. The voices of the most vulnerable in society are heard in decision-making
  4. A social system provides solution to tensions arising from disharmonious development;
  5. An economic system that is able to generate surpluses on a sustained basis
  6. It is transparent, equitable, consensus oriented, accountable, and follows the rule of law.
  7. It assures that corruption is minimized.

Five important Critical Thinking Skills

3. Decision-making Skill: While a decision can be described as an act of selection or choice of one action from several alternatives, decision-making can be defined as the process of selecting a right and effective course of action from two or more alternatives for the purpose of achieving a desired result.

4. Evaluating Skill: The goal of evaluating a text is to form an opinion or judgment about the content, quality, or validity of the content with the intent of communicating your opinion to others later. Evaluating a text begins with summarizing the main idea of the text in order to grasp what it is about.

5. Problem solving Skill: This refers to the ability to use knowledge, facts, and data to effectively solve problems. This doesn’t mean you need to have an immediate answer, it means you have to be able to think on your feet, assess problems and find solutions.

Evaluation Skills

Evaluation in critical reading involves examining textual arguments to make a judgement. To make evaluative claims, the reader needs to distinguish fact from opinion, and separate arguments given for and against the various claims. It will therefore be useful to ask some evaluative questions to establish the purpose and the veracity of the text contents. The reader may ask questions relating to:

1. The purpose of the text, e.g. why would a document be released at a particular time and not at another time; what purpose is a “Breaking news” item designed to serve?
2. The writer’s attitude towards the text topic
3. The claims being made in the text
4. the reliability of the conclusions drawn in the light of the evidence presented.
5. the writer’s use of language in terms of the meaning being covered. For instance, what would be the difference between “Fulani herdsmen” and “terrorists”; “unknown gunmen” and “hired killers”?

A key element to critical evaluation is to form opinion or response to the value of the text.
It however must be noted that the tendency to always look for the negative in text production is not synonymous with evaluation. An inherently evaluative exercise can have a positive orientation
while at the same time pointing out the weaknesses of the text. In addition, it is expected that the evaluation should offer solutions (action/recommendation-based).

Language Question in Critical Reading
Language as a vehicle of communication provides a proper channel to express and share ideas that help to create mutual understanding which is a prerequisite for any significant development. Therefore, it is safe to state that the language in which a text is encoded is the central factor affecting the reader’s ability to process a text.
Generally, language embodies the totality of human experience within a specific socio cultural context. It determines the way people think. This is the central idea of the Edward Sapir Nand Benjamin Lee Whorf hypothesis (Sapir, 1983. Whorf 2012) which holds the belief that the structure of a language determines a native speaker’s perception and categorization of experience. The Sapir–Whorf linguistic relativity
hypothesis hinges language users’ perception of reality on the cognitive affordances made available by the language they speak.

Consequently, it could be argued that the language in which a text is constructed ultimately shapes the
reader’s perception of the reality being projected by the writers of the text. The acquisition of
language skills will engender better communication (between the text encoder and the text decoder) that is requisite in the maintenance of governance systems and structures for sustainable development of society. To this extent, language literacy can be regarded as the backbone of any critical engagement that contributes to sustainability. If it is true that language literacy (constructed and reproduced in texts) bequeaths a legacy of responsible citizenship and responsive governance to successive generations; then
language certainly plays a big role in sustainable development.


Scroll to Top