Critical Thinking vs Problem Solving: Key Differences Explained
Critical thinking and problem solving are frequently confused or used interchangeably. They are related but distinct cognitive skills that predict different things and develop through different practices.
Head-to-head comparison
| Dimension | Critical Thinking | Problem Solving |
|---|---|---|
| Core process | Evaluate, analyse, judge | Identify, generate, implement, evaluate |
| Primary output | Sound judgement and accurate belief | Effective solution and resolved problem |
| Key skills | Inference, assumption recognition, argument evaluation, deduction | Root cause analysis, solution generation, decision-making, implementation |
| Gold standard test | Watson-Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal | McKinsey Problem Solving Test, CEB SHL Inductive Reasoning |
| Used in hiring for | Law, consulting, finance, management, journalism | Engineering, product management, operations, consulting, data science |
| Relationship | Critical thinking is a tool used within problem solving; problem solving requires but extends beyond critical thinking | |
How they relate to each other
Critical thinking is best understood as a component of effective problem solving rather than a separate process. When you solve a problem, you need to critically evaluate information about the problem, critically assess proposed solutions, and critically judge whether the implemented solution worked. Problem solving, however, goes further: it requires generating solutions (creative thinking), choosing between them (decision-making), implementing them (practical intelligence), and adapting when they fail (resilience and flexibility).
The practical implication: you can have strong critical thinking and weak problem solving (you evaluate accurately but struggle to generate and implement solutions), or strong problem solving with weak critical thinking (you act quickly but sometimes on faulty premises). The best performers develop both.
Frequently asked questions
Which is more important for employment: critical thinking or problem solving?
Both are among the most in-demand cognitive skills according to World Economic Forum Future of Jobs reports. Critical thinking is more specifically tested in professional services (law, consulting, finance). Problem solving is more broadly required across all roles. In practice, employers who test for one usually value both — the Watson-Glaser is used in law and consulting because those roles require both rigorous evaluation and effective solution implementation.
Can critical thinking and problem solving be taught?
Yes, both respond to instruction and deliberate practice. Critical thinking improves through formal logic study, argument mapping, and practising the identification of assumptions and fallacies. Problem solving improves through structured frameworks (design thinking, PDCA, root cause analysis), deliberate exposure to novel problem types, and post-solution reflection on what worked and why. Research by Alvarez (2007) showed CT instruction produces measurable improvements in 8–12 week programmes.
How do employers test critical thinking vs problem solving?
Critical thinking is tested through argument evaluation tasks (Watson-Glaser), logical inference questions, and case study analysis. Problem solving is tested through case interviews (McKinsey-style), situational judgement tests, work samples, and structured problem-solving exercises. Many employer assessments combine both: an analytical reasoning battery covering both evaluation and solution-generation tasks.
Last updated: June 2026 · IntelligencesTest.com Comparison Guide
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