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Critical and Creative Thinking - Bloom's Taxonomy

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Critical and Creative Thinking - Bloom's Taxonomy

What are critical thinking and creative thinking?


 
What's Bloom's taxonomy and how is it helpful in project planning?
 
How are the domains of learning reflected in technology-rich projects?

Benjamin Bloom (1956) developed a classification of levels of intellectual behavior in


learning. This taxonomy contained three overlapping domains: the cognitive, psychomotor,
and affective. Within the cognitive domain, he identified six levels: knowledge,
comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. These domains and
levels are still useful today as you develop the critical thinking skills of your students.

Critical Thinking

Critical thinking involves logical thinking and reasoning including skills such as
comparison, classification, sequencing, cause/effect, patterning, webbing, analogies,
deductive and inductive reasoning, forecasting, planning, hypothesizing, and critiquing.

Creative thinking involves creating something new or original. It involves the skills of flexibility, originality,
fluency, elaboration, brainstorming, modification, imagery, associative thinking, attribute listing, metaphorical
thinking, forced relationships. The aim of creative thinking is to stimulate curiosity and promote divergence.
 
While critical thinking can be thought of as more left-brain and creative thinking more right brain, they both
involve "thinking." When we talk about HOTS "higher-order thinking skills" we're concentrating on the top
three levels of Bloom's Taxonomy: analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.

Knowledge
collect describe identify list show tell tabulate
define examine label name retell state quote
enumerate match read record reproduce copy select
Examples:  dates, events, places, vocabulary, key ideas, parts of diagram, 5Ws 

Comprehension
associate compare distinguish extend interpret predict differentiate
contrast describe discuss estimate group summarize order
cite convert explain paraphrase restate trace
Examples: find meaning, transfer, interpret facts, infer cause & consequence, examples 

Application
apply classify change illustrate solve demonstrate
calculate complete solve modify show experiment
relate discover act administer articulate chart
collect compute construct determine develop establish
prepare produce report teach transfer use
Examples: use information in new situations, solve problems 

Analysis
analyze arrange connect divide infer separate
classify compare contrast explain select order
breakdown correlate diagram discriminate focus illustrate
infer outline prioritize subdivide points out prioritize
Examples:  recognize and explain patterns and meaning, see parts and wholes 

Synthesis
combine compose generalize modify invent plan substitute
create formulate integrate rearrange design speculate rewrite
adapt anticipate collaborate compile devise express facilitate
reinforce structure substitute intervene negotiate reorganize validate
Examples:  discuss "what if" situations, create new ideas, predict and draw conclusions 

Evaluation
assess compare decide discriminate measure rank test
convince conclude explain grade judge summarize support
appraise criticize defend persuade justify reframe
Examples:  make recommendations, assess value and make choices, critique ideas 

Affective Domain

Domain Attributes: interpersonal relations, emotions, attitudes, appreciations, and values id


accepts attempts challenges defends disputes joins judges
contributes praises questions shares supports volunteers
 
Learning levels, learning domains, reflecting and extending learning, cognitive, perceptual, affective,

interpersonal, and psychomotor. Do these words sound familiar or not? What are the levels of

learning?

Bloom's Taxonomy Infographic: Language for communication about learning.

Kevin Wilcoxon, Instructional Designer at University of Nevada Las Vegas, created the following
infographic to simply describe the Blooms Taxonomy. In my opinion, this infographic is a 60-Second
guide to Blooms Taxonomy with no necessary words or graphs, straight forward and up to the point.

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