Research Article

Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence as a Methodology for Building Higher-Order Thinking Skills: A Contemporary Educational Perspective

Authors

  • Anas Mahmoud Al-Awatli Al-Rifai Sheikh Noah Al-Qudah Faculty of Sharia and Law, The World Islamic Sciences and Education University (WISE) – Amman – Jordan

Abstract

This study aimed to explore the relationship between Higher-Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) and the science of Usul al-Fiqh (Islamic legal theory), and to examine the potential of employing the cognitive and methodological processes embedded in usuli reasoning to develop higher-order thinking skills among learners. The study was based on the assumption that Usul al-Fiqh is not merely a discipline concerned with regulating the derivation of legal rulings from their detailed evidences; rather, it represents an integrated epistemological framework that encompasses higher-level cognitive processes corresponding to the skills emphasized in contemporary educational literature.   The study adopted the descriptive-analytical method through analyzing educational literature related to higher-order thinking skills, examining the epistemological and methodological structure of Usul al-Fiqh, and identifying the functional correspondences between higher-order cognitive skills and usuli procedures. The study focused on five major skills: analytical thinking, critical thinking, evaluative thinking and decision-making/problem-solving, strategic and foresight thinking, and creative thinking, while highlighting the corresponding usuli mechanisms and their potential educational applications.   The findings revealed clear cognitive and functional intersections between higher-order thinking skills and the mechanisms of usuli reasoning. Issues such as semantic analysis, analogical reasoning (qiyas), verification of the operative cause (tahqiq al-manat), and legal causation (ta‘lil) embody advanced forms of analytical thinking. Meanwhile, methods such as elimination and classification (al-sabr wa al-taqsim), objection, and preference (tarjih) represent applications of critical and evaluative thinking. Discussions of legal consequences (ma’alat) and blocking the means (sadd al-dhara’i‘) reflect strategic and foresight thinking, whereas ijtihad, public interest reasoning (istislah), and refinement of the operative cause (takhrij al-manat) contribute to the development of creative thinking and the generation of solutions for contemporary issues.   The study concluded that Usul al-Fiqh constitutes a rich epistemological and methodological framework that can be utilized to develop higher-order thinking skills, thereby contributing to the improvement of educational curricula and teaching practices while promoting integration between the Islamic intellectual heritage and contemporary educational requirements.

Article information

Journal

Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies

Volume (Issue)

8 (7)

Pages

118-135

Published

09-07-2026

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Keywords:

Usul al-Fiqh, Usuli Thinking, Higher-Order Thinking Skills, Islamic Education