Bloom Taxonomy
Bloom Taxonomy
Bloom Taxonomy
Definition
Key Words
Knowledge
Recall information
Application
Analysis
Synthesis
Evaluation
Todays world is a different place, however, than the one Blooms Taxonomy reflected in 1956.
Educators have learned a great deal more about how students learn and teachers teach and now
recognize that teaching and learning encompasses more than just thinking. It also involves the
feelings and beliefs of students and teachers as well as the social and cultural environment of the
classroom.
Several cognitive psychologists have worked to make the basic concept of a taxonomy of thinking
skills more relevant and accurate. In developing his own taxonomy of educational objectives, Marzano
(2000) points out one criticism of Blooms Taxonomy. The very structure of the Taxonomy, moving
from the simplest level of knowledge to the most difficult level of evaluation, is not supported by
research. A hierarchical taxonomy implies that each higher skill is composed of the skills beneath it;
comprehension requires knowledge; application requires comprehension and knowledge, and so on.
This, according to Marzano, is simply not true of the cognitive processes in Blooms Taxonomy.
The originators of the original six thinking processes assumed that complex projects could be labeled
as requiring one of the processes more than the others. A task was primarily an analysis or an
evaluation task. This has been proven not to be true which may account for the difficulty that
educators have classifying challenging learning activities using the Taxonomy. Anderson (2000)
argues that nearly all complex learning activities require the use of several different cognitive skills.
Like any theoretical model, Blooms Taxonomy has its strengths and weaknesses. Its greatest strength
is that it has taken the very important topic of thinking and placed a structure around it that is usable
by practitioners. Those teachers who keep a list of question prompts relating to the various levels of
Blooms Taxonomy undoubtedly do a better job of encouraging higher-order thinking in their students
than those who have no such tool. On the other hand, as anyone who has worked with a group of
educators to classify a group of questions and learning activities according to the Taxonomy can
attest, there is little consensus about what seemingly self-evident terms like analysis, or
evaluation mean. In addition, so many worthwhile activities, such as authentic problems and
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projects, cannot be mapped to the Taxonomy, and trying to do that would diminish their potential as
learning opportunities.
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Examples
Recalling
Exemplifying
Classifying
Summarizing
Inferring
Comparing
Draw a parallelogram.
List the key points related to capital punishment that the Web
site promotes.
Write about an experience you have had that was like the
pioneers moving west.
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Explaining
Pitch a baseball.
Create a budget.
ApplyingUse a procedure
Executing
Implementing
AnalyzingBreak a concept down into its parts and describe how the parts relate to the
whole
Differentiating
Organizing
Attributing
Critiquing
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Planning
Producing
Examples
Knowledge of theories,
models, and structures
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Self-knowledge
References
Anderson, L. W. & Krathwohl, D. R. (2001). A taxonomy for learning, teaching, and assessing. New
York: Longman.
Bloom, B.S., (Ed.). 1956. Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals:
Handbook I, cognitive domain. New York: Longman.
Costa, A. L. (Ed.). (2000). Developing minds: A resource book for teaching thinking. Alexandria, VA:
ASCD.
Marzano, R. J. (2000). Designing a new taxonomy of educational objectives. Thousand Oaks, CA:
Corwin Press.
Copyright 2012 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. Intel, the Intel logo, the Intel Education Initiative, and the Intel Teach Program are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its
subsidiaries in the U.S. and other countries.
*Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
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