Blooms Taxonomy of Learning Dr M Mozahar Ali
Bloom’s Taxonomy of Learning Dr. M. Mozahar Ali Professor, Agril. Extension Educ. & Director GTI, BAU, Mymensingh Cell: 01711391190
Bloom’s Taxonomy (Taxonomy of Learning) 3 Domains (1) Cognitive Remember Understand Apply Analyze Evaluate (2) Affective Receiving Responding Valuing Organization Characterizati (3) Psychomotor Imitation Manipulation Precision Articulation Naturalization
Bloom’s Taxonomy • In 1956, Benjamin Bloom headed a group of educational psychologists who developed a classification of levels of intellectual behavior important in learning. • During the 1990's a new group of cognitive psychologist, lead by Lorin Anderson (a former student of Bloom's), updated the taxonomy reflecting relevance to 21 st century work.
SA Standards v/s Bloom’s Standard 5 -2: Teaching learning practice involves practical evidence, initiates critical thinking, and inspires students to apply acquired knowledge in the real life situations focusing on higher order of learning? ? § Focus of Learning ? ? § Focus on HEQEP, 2014. SA Manual
Use of Bloom’s Taxonomy 1. Setting LEARNING OUTCOMES (LOs) & educational objectives 2. Selecting teaching methods/strategies 3. Selecting teaching aids-materials 4. Preparation of ASSESSMENT TOOLS 5. Development & review of CURRICULUM 6. Development & review of SYLLABUS
Bloom’s Taxonomy: Three Major Domains Bloom, 1956 Anderson, 2001 Mental Skills (Knowledge) What we “know” Psychomotor Affective Manual or Physical Skills (Skills) Growth in feelings or emotional areas How we “do” Dave, 1975 Cognitive (Attitude) How we “feel” Krathwohl 12 et al. , 1964
HEAD: MINDSET TRANSFORMATION HEART: THE WILL AND RESILIENCY HANDS: PROACTIVITY
Relationship between three Domains Cognitive Affective Psychomotor Cognitive Affective Cognitive Psychomotor
1. Cognitive (Knowledge is power)
1. Cognitive Domain
1. Cognitive (Original & Modified)
1. 1: Recall or Remember Ability to recall or recognize items of information, ideas etc. § § § § Define Recall, find Write, record Select, match Name, list Underline Label, draw Can the student recall or remember the information?
1. 2: Comprehend Ability to show understanding of ideas, e. g. by expressing ideas in own words or transposing into alternative forms • • Interpret Classify, describe Explain, identify Summarize, locate Compare, contrast Represent, recognize Discuss Translate Can the student explain ideas or concepts?
1. 3: Apply Ability to apply knowledge and ideas in order to meet the demands of situations or problems, which are new to the learner § § Predict Demonstrate Compute, Sketch Find, discover § Solve Modify, convert Show, arrange Operate, perform Construct, prepare § Execute, Implement § § • Can the student use the information in a new way?
1. 4: Analyze Ability to deal with situations where elements have to be analyzed and restructured before relevant ideas can be applied • • • Break down, categorize Conclude, generalize Criticize, defend Differentiate Diagram Estimate Infer, illustrate Order, classify Separate, discriminate Subdivide, take apart Can the student distinguish between the different parts?
1. 5: Evaluate Ability to judge the quality or value of material by reference to appropriate criteria • • • Argue, criticize Compare Conclude Decide Discriminate Judge, select Justify, verify Measure, test Support, defend Can the student justify a stand or
1. 6: Create (Synthesize) Ability to put ideas together in new ways that reach beyond what has been specifically taught • Argue • Combine • Compose • Construct • Create • Design • Plan • Formulate • Re-arrange • Revise, rewrite • Generalize, deduce Can the student create new product/point of view?
Bloom’s cognitive domain Six sub-domains of cognitive domain: 1. Remembering 2. Understanding 3. Applying 4. Analysing 5. Evaluating 6. Creating 30 Lower-level Learning Higher Order Learning
Bloom’s cognitive domain Six sub-domains of cognitive domain: 1. Remembering 2. Understanding 3. Applying 4. Analysing 5. Evaluating 6. Creating 31 Lower-level Learning Higher Order Learning
Cognitive Domain Create Design Evaluate Analyse Apply Explore Understand Remember 32 Support
Advice of an Educationist When we are green We are growing When we are ripen We are ready to rot
2. Affective Your attitude is a little thing, but it makes a big difference. It's your attitude that determines your altitude.
2. Affective Krathwohl et al. , 1964 1. Receiving phenomena: Awareness, willingness to hear, selected attention. 2. Responding to phenomena: Active participation on the part of the learners. 3. Valuing: The worth or value a person attaches to a particular object, phenomenon, or behavior.
2. Affective (contd. ) 4. Organization: Organizes values into priorities; emphasis is on comparing, relating, and synthesizing values. 5. Characterization (Internalizing values): Has a value system that controls their behavior.
Affective Domain Taxonomy Levels Characterizing Organizing Valuing Responding Receiving 39
3. Psychomotor Action speaks louder than words
3. Psychomotor Dave, 1975 1. Imitation: Observing and patterning behavior after someone else 2. Manipulation: Being able to perform certain actions by following instructions and practicing 3. Precision: Refining, becoming more exact. 4. Articulation: Coordinating a series of actions, achieving harmony and internal consistency 5. Naturalization: Having high level performance become natural, without needing to think much about it.
Psychomotor Domain Taxonomy Levels Naturalization Articulation Precision Manipulation Imitation 42
Key Points Learned Cognitive Affective Psychomotor Remember Receiving Imitation Understand Responding Manipulation Apply Valuing Precision Analyze Organization Articulation Evaluate Characterizatio Naturalization n Create Write one Action Verb for each Level in pair ……….
? ? You have 16 Options: ? ? Do you know the destination of your student ? ? ?
What Kind of Learning? ? ? On 16 Jan 2009; 155 Passengers of US Airways had no option but to stand on the plane's wings in the immediate aftermath of the crash.
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