Title: BLOOM
1BLOOMS TAXONOMY
2BLOOMS TAXONOMY
Competence Skills Demonstrated
Remembering The recall of specific information
Understanding Comprehension of what was read
Applying Converting abstract content to concrete situations
Analyzing Comparison and contrast of the content to personal experiences
Evaluating Judgment and evaluation of characters, actions, outcomes, etc., for personal reflection and understanding
Creating Invention, production of an original piece. YOU design it!
3RememberingMemorization
- Observation and recall of information
- Knowledge of dates, events, places
- Knowledge of major ideas
- Mastery of subject matter
4RememberingVerbs that may appear in a prompt
- Arrange
- Define
- Describe
- Duplicate
- Identify
- Label
- List
- Memorize
- Name
- Order
- Quote
- Recall
- Recognize
- Relate
- Repeat
- Reproduce
5Understanding COMPREHENSION
- Understand information
- Grasp meaning
- Translate knowledge into new content
- Interpret facts, compare, contrast
- Order, group, infer causes
- Predict consequences
6UnderstandingVerbs that may appear in a prompt
- Classify
- Describe
- Discuss
- Explain
- Express
- Identify
- Indicate
- Locate
- Recognize
- Report
- Restate
- Review
- Select
- Translate
7Applying Using
- Use information previously learned
- Use methods, concepts, theories in new situations
- Solve problems using required skills or knowledge
8Applying Verbs that may appear in a prompt
- Apply
- Choose
- Demonstrate
- Dramatize
- Employ
- Illustrate
- Interpret
- Operate
- Practice
- Schedule
- Sketch
- Solve
- Use
- Write
9Analyzing Taking apart
- Recognition of patterns
- Organization of parts
- Discovery of hidden meanings
- Identification of components
10AnalyzingVerbs that may appear in a prompt
- Analyze
- Appraise
- Calculate
- Categorize
- Compare
- Contrast
- Criticize
- Differentiate
- Discriminate
- Distinguish
- Examine
- Experiment
- Question
- Test
11Evaluating Judging
- Compare and discriminate between ideas
- Assess value of theories, presentations
- Make choices based on reasoned argument
- Verify value of evidence
- Recognize authors bias
12EvaluatingVerbs that may appear in a prompt
- Appraise
- Argue
- Assess
- Attach
- Choose
- Compare
- Defend
- Estimate
- Judge
- Predict
- Rate
- Select
- Support
- Value
- Evaluate
- Explain
13CreatingMaking a new product
- Assemble
- Construct
- Design
- Develop
- Formulate
- Write
14REFERENCES
- Bloom, B., Englehart M., Furst, E., Hill, W.,
Krathwohl, D. (1956). Taxonomy of educational
objectives The classification of educational
goals. Handbook I Cognitive Domain. New York
Longmans Green.
15Web resources
- http//www.che.wsu.edu/millerre/bloom.html
- http//www.coun.uvic.ca/learn/program/hndouts/bloo
m.html - http//www.kent.wednet.edu/KSD/MA/resources/blooms
/teachers_blooms.html - http//www.tecweb.org/eddevel/blooms.html
- http//www.valdosta.peachnet.edu/whuitt/psy702/co
gsys/critthnk.html
16BLOOMS TAXONOMY
- applied to
- GOLDILOCKS AND THE THREE BEARS
17Rememberingthe recall of specific information
- Who was Goldilocks?
- Where did she live? With whom?
- What did she do in the forest?
18Understandingcomprehending of what was read
- This story is about ___________ (topic).
- This story tells us _________(main idea).
- What did Goldilocks look like?
19Applyingthe converting of abstract content to
concrete situations
- How were the bears like real people?
- Why did Goldilocks go into the little house?
- Draw a picture of what the bears house looked
like. - Draw a map showing Goldilocks house, the path in
the forest, the bears house, etc.
20Analyzingthe comparison and contrast of the
content to personal experience
- How did each bear react to what Goldilocks did?
- How would you react?
- Compare Goldilocks to any of your friends.
- Do you know any animals (pets) that act human?
21EVALUATIONthe judgment and evaluation of
characters, actions, outcomes, etc., for personal
reflection and understanding
- Why were the bears angry with Goldilocks?
- Do you think Goldilocks was happy to get home?
Explain your answer. - Do you think she learned anything by going into
the bears house? Explain your answer. - Would you have gone into the bears house? Why
or why not?
22EVALUATION CONT.
- Do parents have more experience and background
than their children? Give an example from your
own history. - Do you think this really happened to Goldilocks?
Why or why not? - Why would a grown-up write this story for
children to read? - Why has the story of Goldilocks been told to
children for many, many years?
23Creating
- Make a diorama of the bears house and the
forest. - Make a puppet out of one of the characters.
Using the puppet, act out the story.
24References
- http//www.ops.org/reading/blooms_taxonomy.html