Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Department of Education
REGION I
PANGASINAN SCHOOLS DIVISION OFFICE II
SAN MACARIO NORTE ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL
HILDA R. LANA
JOY C. MALAPIT
LALA G. SORIA
ROGELIO B. LAGASCA
MELANIE S. MALATE
ISRAEL T. RAGUIN
The mind is not a vessel to
be filled, but a fire to be
ignited.
(Plutarch)
Overview
• Bloom’s Taxonomy and higher-order thinking
• Take a walk down memory lane
• Investigate the Revised Taxonomy
– New terms
– New emphasis
• Explore each of the six levels
• See how questioning plays an important role within the
framework (oral language)
• Use the taxonomy to plan a unit
• Look at an integrated approach
• Begin planning a unit with a SMART Blooms Planning Matrix
Productive Pedagogies
A guide to Productive Pedagogies: Classroom reflection manual lists three
degrees of incorporation of Higher-order thinking skills in a “Continuum of
practice”:
• Students are engaged only in lower-order thinking; i.e. they receive, or recite,
or participate in routine practice. In no activities during the lesson do
students go beyond simple reproduction of knowledge.
• Almost all students, almost all of the time are engaged in higher-order
thinking.
(Department of Education, Queensland, 2002, p. 1)
What is Higher-order
thinking?
A guide to Productive Pedagogies: Classroom reflection manual states that:
Higher-order thinking by students involves the transformation of
information and ideas. This transformation occurs when students
combine facts and ideas and synthesise, generalise, explain,
hypothesise or arrive at some conclusion or interpretation.
Manipulating information and ideas through these processes allows
students to solve problems, gain understanding and discover new
meaning. When students engage in the construction of knowledge,
an element of uncertainty is introduced into the instructional
process and the outcomes are not always predictable; in other
words, the teacher is not certain what the students will produce. In
helping students become producers of knowledge, the teacher’s
main instructional task is to create activities or environments that
allow them opportunities to engage in higher-order thinking.
(Department of Education, Queensland, 2002, p. 1)
Bloom’s Revised
Taxonomy
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s- developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
• Continues to be one of the most universally applied models
• Provides a way to organise thinking skills into six levels,
from the most basic to the higher order levels of thinking
• 1990s- Lorin Anderson (former student of Bloom) revisited
the taxonomy
• As a result, a number of changes were made
Original Terms New Terms
• Evaluation •Creating
• Synthesis •Evaluating
• Analysis •Analysing
• Application •Applying
• Comprehension •Understanding
• Knowledge •Remembering
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Change in Terms
• The names of six major categories were changed from noun to verb
forms.
• As the taxonomy reflects different forms of thinking and thinking is
an active process verbs were more accurate.
• The subcategories of the six major categories were also replaced by
verbs
• Some subcategories were reorganised.
• The knowledge category was renamed. Knowledge is a product of
thinking and was inappropriate to describe a category of thinking and
was replaced with the word remembering instead.
• Comprehension became understanding and synthesis was renamed
creating in order to better reflect the nature of the thinking described
by each category.
Change in Emphasis
• More authentic tool for curriculum
planning, instructional delivery and
assessment.
• Aimed at a broader audience.
• Easily applied to all levels of schooling.
• The revision emphasises explanation and
description of subcategories.
BLOOM’S REVISED TAXONOMY
Creating
Generating new ideas, products, or ways of viewing things
Designing, constructing, planning, producing, inventing.
Evaluating
Justifying a decision or course of action
Checking, hypothesising, critiquing, experimenting, judging
Analysing
Breaking information into parts to explore understandings and relationships
Comparing, organising, deconstructing, interrogating, finding
Applying
Using information in another familiar situation
Implementing, carrying out, using, executing
Understanding
Explaining ideas or concepts
Interpreting, summarising, paraphrasing, classifying, explaining
Remembering
Recalling information
Recognising, listing, describing, retrieving, naming, finding
A turtle makes progress
when it sticks its neck
out.
(Anon)
Remembering
The learner is able to recall, restate and remember
learned information.
– Recognising
– Listing
– Describing
– Identifying
– Retrieving
– Naming
– Locating
– Finding
Can you recall information?
Remembering cont’
• List
• Memorise • Listen
• Relate • Group Recall or
• Show
• Locate • Choose recognition of
• specific
Distinguish • Recite information
• Give example
• Reproduce • Review
• Quote • Quote
• Repeat
• Label • Record
• Recall • Match Products include:
• Know
• Group • Select • Quiz • Label
• Read •
•
Underline • Definition • List
Write
• Outline • Cite • Fact • Workbook
• Sort • Worksheet • Reproduction
• Test •Vocabulary
Classroom Roles for
Remembering
Teacher roles Student roles
• Directs • Responds
• Tells • Absorbs
• Shows • Remembers
• Examines • Recognises
• Questions • Memorises
• Evaluates • Defines
• Describes
• Retells
• Passive recipient
Remembering: Potential
Activities and Products
• Make a story map showing the main events of
the story.
• Make a time line of your typical day.
• Make a concept map of the topic.
• Write a list of keywords you know about….
• What characters were in the story?
• Make a chart showing…
• Make an acrostic poem about…
• Recite a poem you have learnt.
Understanding
The learner grasps the meaning of information by
interpreting and translating what has been learned.
– Interpreting
– Exemplifying
– Summarising
– Inferring
– Paraphrasing
– Classifying
– Comparing
– Explaining
Can you explain ideas or concepts?
Understanding cont’
• Restate • Describe
• Identify • Report Understanding
• Discuss
• Recognise of given
• Retell information
• Review
• Research
• Observe
• Annotate
• Outline
• Translate
• Give examples of • Account for Products include:
• Paraphrase • Interpret • Recitation • Example
• Reorganise • Give main • Summary • Quiz
• Associate idea • Collection • List
• Estimate • Explanation • Label
• Define • Show and tell • Outline
Classroom Roles for
Understanding
Teacher roles Student roles
• Demonstrates • Explains
• Listens • Describes
• Questions • Outlines
• Compares • Restates
• Contrasts • Translates
• Examines • Demonstrates
• Interprets
• Active participant
Understanding: Potential
Activities and Products
• Write in your own words…
• Cut out, or draw pictures to illustrate a particular event in the story.
• Report to the class…
• Illustrate what you think the main idea may have been.
• Make a cartoon strip showing the sequence of events in the story.
• Write and perform a play based on the story.
• Write a brief outline to explain this story to someone else
• Explain why the character solved the problem in this particular way
• Write a summary report of the event.
• Prepare a flow chart to illustrate the sequence of events.
• Make a colouring book.
• Paraphrase this chapter in the book.
• Retell in your own words.
• Outline the main points.
Applying
The learner makes use of information in a context different from
the one in which it was learned.
– Implementing
– Carrying out
– Using
– Executing
Can you use the information in another
familiar situation?
Applying cont’
• Translate • Paint
• Manipulate • Change Using strategies,
• Exhibit • Compute concepts, principles
and theories in new
• Illustrate • Sequence situations
• Calculate • Show
• Interpret • Solve
• Make • Collect
• Practice • Demonstrate Products include:
• Apply • Dramatise • Photograph • Presentation
• Operate • Construct • Illustration • Interview
• Interview • Use • Simulation • Performance
• Adapt • Sculpture • Diary
• Draw • Demonstration • Journal
Classroom Roles for Applying
Teacher roles Student roles
• Probes • Discusses
• Guides • Uncovers
• Observes • Argues
• Evaluates • Debates
• Acts as a resource • Thinks deeply
• Questions • Tests
• Organises • Examines
• Dissects • Questions
• Calculates
• Investigates
• Inquires
• Active participant
Analysing: Potential Activities
and Products
• Use a Venn Diagram to show how two topics are the same and different
• Design a questionnaire to gather information.
• Survey classmates to find out what they think about a particular topic. Analyse
the results.
• Make a flow chart to show the critical stages.
• Classify the actions of the characters in the book
• Create a sociogram from the narrative
• Construct a graph to illustrate selected information.
• Make a family tree showing relationships.
• Devise a roleplay about the study area.
• Write a biography of a person studied.
• Prepare a report about the area of study.
• Conduct an investigation to produce information to support a view.
• Review a work of art in terms of form, colour and texture.
• Draw a graph
• Complete a Decision Making Matrix to help you decide which breakfast cereal to
purchase
Evaluating
The learner makes decisions based on in-depth
reflection, criticism and assessment.
– Checking
– Hypothesising
– Critiquing
– Experimenting
– Judging
– Testing
– Detecting
– Monitoring
Can you justify a decision or course of action?
Evaluating cont’
• Judge • Choose
• Rate
• Validate
• Conclude Judging the value of
• Predict • Deduce ideas, materials and
• Assess • Debate methods by developing
• Score • Justify and applying standards
• Revise • and criteria.
Recommend
• Infer •
•
Discriminate
Determine
• Prioritise • Appraise
• Tell why • Value
• Compare • Probe Products include:
• Evaluate • Argue • Debate • Investigation
• Defend • Decide
• • Panel • Verdict
Select •
• Measure
Criticise
• Report • Conclusion
• Rank
• Reject • Evaluation •Persuasive
speech
Classroom Roles for Evaluating
Teacher roles Student roles
• Clarifies • Judges
• Accepts • Disputes
• Guides • Compares
• Critiques
• Questions
• Argues
• Assesses
• Decides
• Selects
• Justifies
• Active participant
Evaluating: Potential Activities
and Products
• Write a letter to the editor
• Prepare and conduct a debate
• Prepare a list of criteria to judge…
• Write a persuasive speech arguing for/against…
• Make a booklet about five rules you see as important. Convince
others.
• Form a panel to discuss viewpoints on….
• Write a letter to. ..advising on changes needed.
• Write a half-yearly report.
• Prepare a case to present your view about...
• Complete a PMI on…
• Evaluate the character’s actions in the story
Creating
The learner creates new ideas and information using
what has been previously learned.
– Designing
– Constructing
– Planning
– Producing
– Inventing
– Devising
– Making
Can you generate new products, ideas, or ways of
viewing things?
Creating cont’
• Compose
• Assemble • Formulate
• Organise • Improve Putting together ideas
• Invent or elements to develop
• Compile • Act a original idea or
• Forecast engage in creative
•
• Predict thinking.
Devise
• Propose • Produce
• Construct
• Plan • Blend
• Prepare • Set up Products include:
• Develop • Film • Song
• Originate • Devise
• Imagine • Story • Newspaper
• Concoct
• Generate • Project • Media product
• Compile • Plan • Advertisement
• New game • Painting
Classroom Roles for Creating
Teacher roles Student roles
• Facilitates • Designs
• Extends • Formulates
• Reflects • Plans
• Takes risks
• Analyses
• Modifies
• Evaluates
• Creates
• Proposes
• Active participant
Creating: Potential Activities and
Products
• Use the SCAMPER strategy to invent a new type of sports shoe
• Invent a machine to do a specific task.
• Design a robot to do your homework.
• Create a new product. Give it a name and plan a marketing campaign.
• Write about your feelings in relation to...
• Write a TV show play, puppet show, role play, song or pantomime about..
• Design a new monetary system
• Develop a menu for a new restaurant using a variety of healthy foods
• Design a record, book or magazine cover for...
• Sell an idea
• Devise a way to...
• Make up a new language and use it in an example
• Write a jingle to advertise a new product.
Practical Bloom’s
• Suitable for use with the entire class
• Emphasis on certain levels for different children
• Extend children’s thinking skills through emphasis on higher levels of the taxonomy
(analysis, evaluation, creation)
• Possible approaches with a class could be:
– All children work through the remembering and understanding stages and then select at
least one activity from each other level
– All children work through first two levels and then select activities from any other level
– Some children work at lower level while others work at higher levels
– All children select activities from any level
– Some activities are tagged “essential” while others are “optional”
– A thinking process singled out for particular attention eg. Comparing, (done with all
children, small group or individual)
– Some children work through the lower levels and then design their own activities at the
higher levels
– All children write their own activities from the taxonomy
(Black, 1988, p. 23).
Sample Unit : Space
Cut out “space” pictures from a magazine. Make a display or a
Remembering collage. List space words (Alphabet Key). List the names of the
planets in our universe. List all the things an astronaut would need
for a space journey.
Make your desk into a spaceship, Make an astronaut for a puppet
Understanding play. Use it to tell what an astronaut does. Make a model of the
planets in our solar system.
Bloom’s
Revised
Taxonomy
Creating Green Hat, Construction Key, SCAMPER,
Ridiculous Key, Combination Key, Invention Key
(Chinese Proverb)