SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 27
Bloom’s Taxonomy
AAMIR HUSSAIN SHAHANI
M.A EPM
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF MODERN LANGUAGES
ISLAMABAD
14 DECEMBER 2017
EMAIL: hussainiaamir512@gmail.com
Who is Benjamin Bloom?
 - A Jewish-American educational psychologist
 Contributions:
 1. Classification of educational objectives
 2. Theory of Mastery-Learning
What is TAXONOMY?
 Comes from two Greek words:
 Taxis: arrangement
 Nomos: science
 Science of arrangements
 A set of classification principles, or
structure and Domain simply means
category.
BACKGROUND
 In 1956, Benjamin Bloom with collaborators Max
Englehart, Edward Furst, Walter Hill, and David
Krathwohl
 published a framework for categorizing
educational goals:
 Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
 this framework has been applied by generations
of teachers and college instructors in their
teaching.
DEFINITION
Bloom’s taxonomy is a
classification system used to
define and distinguish different
levels of human cognition—i.e.,
thinking, learning, and
understanding.
PURPOSE
The purpose of Bloom’s Taxonomy is
to help educators to inform or guide
the development of assessments
(tests and other evaluations of student
learning), curriculum (units, lessons,
projects, and other learning activities),
and instructional methods such as
questioning strategies.
BLOOM’S TAXONOMY
 ORGINAL TAXONOMY (1956)
 By BLOOM
 REVISED TAXONOMY (2001)
 By LORIN ANDERSON
 A farmer student of Bloom
The Original Taxonomy (1956)
 The Three Domains Of Learning:
 Cognitive: mental skills (knowledge)
 Affective: growth in feelings or emotional areas
(attitude or self)
 Psychomotor: manual or physical skills (skills)
 Instructional designers, trainers, and
educators often refer to these three categories
as KSA
COGNITIVE DOMAIN
 The cognitive domain involves knowledge
and the development of intellectual skills.
 This includes the recall or recognition of
specific facts, procedural patterns, and
concepts that serve in the development of
intellectual abilities and skills. There are
six major categories of cognitive
processes, starting from the simplest to
the most complex
COGNITIVE DOMAIN
KNOWLEDGE
“involves the recall of specifics and
universals, the recall of methods and
processes, or the recall of a pattern,
structure, or setting.”
Student can:
Write, List, Define with his knowledge
if he have.
COPREHENSION
 Refers to a type of understanding or
apprehension such that the individual
knows what is being communicated.
 Student translates, comprehends or
interprets information based on prior
learning like:
 Explain, summarize, paraphrase, describe
APPLICATION
 Refers to the “use of abstractions in
particular and concrete situations.”
 Student selects, transfers and uses data
and principles to complete a problem with
a minimum of direction.
 How student can use, compute,solve and
apply his knowledge.
 Example:
100-15=85
ANALYSIS
 Breakdown of a communication into its
constituent elements or parts.
 Student distinguishes, classifies and relates the
evidence or structure of a statement or question.
 Student can analyze, categorize, compare and
separate.
 Example: old capital of Pakistan? New capital?
 Why? (Analysis)
SYNTHESIS
 Involves the “putting together of elements and parts
so as to form a whole.”
 Student originates, integrates, and combines ideas
into a product, plan or proposal that is new to him.
 He can create, design, invent and develop
 He can combine different types of information to find
alternative solutions.
 Example: he can combine this to make a sentence:
 Mother – invention –is- necessary - the
EVALUATION
Judgments about the value of material
and methods for given purposes.
Student can judge what he learned
whether it is right or wrong. If wrong
than he can start the process again.
Student can judge, recommend,
critique and justify.
The Affective Domain
 Skills in the affective domain describe the way
people react emotionally and their ability to feel
other living things' pain or joy. Affective
objectives typically target the awareness and
growth in attitudes, emotion, and feelings.
 There are five levels in the affective domain moving
through the lowest-order processes to the highest:
 Receiving
 Responding
 Valuing
 Organizing
 characterizing
RECEIVING
The lowest level; the student
passively pays attention. Without this
level, no learning can occur. Receiving
is about the student's memory and
recognition as well.
EXAMPLE: Student saw a person
helping poor...
RESPONDING
The student actively participates
in the learning process, not only
attends to a stimulus; the student
also reacts in some way.
EXAMPLE: He saw that people
appreciating the person who helped
poor…
VALUING
The student attaches a value to an
object, phenomenon, or piece of
information. The student associates a
value or some values to the
knowledge they acquired.
 Example: He gives value that helping poor
is an appreciable work…
ORGANIZING
The student can put together different
values, information, and ideas, and
can accommodate them within his/her
own schema; the student is
comparing, relating and elaborating
on what has been learned.
 Example: Than he organizes his learning
that how he can help poor…
CHARACTARIZING
The student at this level tries
to build abstract knowledge.
Example: At this stage the habit
becomes the part of his character.
The Psychomotor Domain (action-
based)
 Skills in the psychomotor domain describe
the ability to physically manipulate a tool
or instrument like a hand or a hammer.
Psychomotor objectives usually focus on
change and/or development in behavior
and/or skills.
 Bloom and his colleagues never created
subcategories for skills in the psychomotor
domain.
Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy (2001)
 Lorin Anderson, a former student of Bloom, and
David Krathwohl revisited the cognitive domain and
made some changes.
 They mad these changes:
 changing the names in the six categories from noun
to verb forms.
 creating a processes and levels of knowledge matrix.
 rearranging them.
Implications
 Bloom's taxonomy serves as the backbone of
many teaching philosophies, in particular, those
that lean more towards skills rather than content.
 Bloom's taxonomy can be used as a teaching
tool to help balance assessment and evaluative
questions in class, assignments and texts to
ensure all orders of thinking are exercised in
students' learning, including aspects of
information searching.
Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy
IMPLICATIONS
 Bloom's taxonomy serves as the backbone of
many teaching philosophies, in particular, those
that lean more towards skills rather than content.
 Bloom's taxonomy can be used as a teaching
tool to help balance assessment and evaluative
questions in class, assignments and texts to
ensure all orders of thinking are exercised in
students' learning, including aspects of
information searching.

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Examination and Evaluation
Examination and EvaluationExamination and Evaluation
Examination and Evaluation
jagannath Dange
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Assessment for learning
Assessment for learningAssessment for learning
Assessment for learning
 
Bloom's Taxonomy
Bloom's TaxonomyBloom's Taxonomy
Bloom's Taxonomy
 
Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives.pptx
Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives.pptxBloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives.pptx
Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives.pptx
 
Blooms taxonomy powerpoint
Blooms taxonomy powerpointBlooms taxonomy powerpoint
Blooms taxonomy powerpoint
 
Principles of teaching
Principles of teachingPrinciples of teaching
Principles of teaching
 
Stimulus variation skill
Stimulus variation skillStimulus variation skill
Stimulus variation skill
 
Transfer of learning - – types of transfer – teaching for positive transfer
Transfer of learning - – types of transfer – teaching for positive transferTransfer of learning - – types of transfer – teaching for positive transfer
Transfer of learning - – types of transfer – teaching for positive transfer
 
Activity Based Learning
Activity Based LearningActivity Based Learning
Activity Based Learning
 
ASSESSMENT AND TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
ASSESSMENT AND TYPES OF ASSESSMENTASSESSMENT AND TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
ASSESSMENT AND TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
 
Purpose of assessment
Purpose of assessmentPurpose of assessment
Purpose of assessment
 
Team teaching
Team teachingTeam teaching
Team teaching
 
Lesson planning
 Lesson planning  Lesson planning
Lesson planning
 
diversity (b.ed notes) COURSE 1
diversity (b.ed notes) COURSE 1diversity (b.ed notes) COURSE 1
diversity (b.ed notes) COURSE 1
 
Examination and Evaluation
Examination and EvaluationExamination and Evaluation
Examination and Evaluation
 
Ppt achievement test
Ppt achievement testPpt achievement test
Ppt achievement test
 
Meaning of Test, Testing and Evaluation
Meaning of Test, Testing and EvaluationMeaning of Test, Testing and Evaluation
Meaning of Test, Testing and Evaluation
 
Meaning, nature and functions of assessment
Meaning, nature and functions of assessmentMeaning, nature and functions of assessment
Meaning, nature and functions of assessment
 
What is teaching
What is teachingWhat is teaching
What is teaching
 
Importance of lesson planning.pptx
Importance of lesson planning.pptxImportance of lesson planning.pptx
Importance of lesson planning.pptx
 
Assessment.....ppt
Assessment.....pptAssessment.....ppt
Assessment.....ppt
 

Similar a Bloom’s Taxonomy PowerPoint Presentation 2017

Bloom's taxonomy revised
Bloom's taxonomy revisedBloom's taxonomy revised
Bloom's taxonomy revised
Irina K
 
Chapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdf
Chapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdfChapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdf
Chapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdf
JerumPalahang1
 

Similar a Bloom’s Taxonomy PowerPoint Presentation 2017 (20)

Taxonomy.ppt
Taxonomy.pptTaxonomy.ppt
Taxonomy.ppt
 
Objective related principle in teaching
Objective related principle in teachingObjective related principle in teaching
Objective related principle in teaching
 
COMPARATIVE REVIEW OF BLOOM AND SOLO TAXONOMY (https://youtu.be/r8Qj5D38GQU)
COMPARATIVE REVIEW OF BLOOM AND SOLO TAXONOMY (https://youtu.be/r8Qj5D38GQU)COMPARATIVE REVIEW OF BLOOM AND SOLO TAXONOMY (https://youtu.be/r8Qj5D38GQU)
COMPARATIVE REVIEW OF BLOOM AND SOLO TAXONOMY (https://youtu.be/r8Qj5D38GQU)
 
bloomstaxonomyrevised-110923015928-phpapp02.pdf
bloomstaxonomyrevised-110923015928-phpapp02.pdfbloomstaxonomyrevised-110923015928-phpapp02.pdf
bloomstaxonomyrevised-110923015928-phpapp02.pdf
 
Bloom's taxonomy revised
Bloom's taxonomy revisedBloom's taxonomy revised
Bloom's taxonomy revised
 
Eto po ung pinakalast na edit
Eto po ung pinakalast na editEto po ung pinakalast na edit
Eto po ung pinakalast na edit
 
vyron, parcon
vyron, parconvyron, parcon
vyron, parcon
 
MED06-Blooms-Taxonomy-of-Instructional-Objectives.pptx
MED06-Blooms-Taxonomy-of-Instructional-Objectives.pptxMED06-Blooms-Taxonomy-of-Instructional-Objectives.pptx
MED06-Blooms-Taxonomy-of-Instructional-Objectives.pptx
 
Blooms Taxonomy.pptx
Blooms Taxonomy.pptxBlooms Taxonomy.pptx
Blooms Taxonomy.pptx
 
Taxonomy of objectives by benjamin bloom
Taxonomy of objectives by benjamin bloomTaxonomy of objectives by benjamin bloom
Taxonomy of objectives by benjamin bloom
 
Blooms taxonomy a revolutionary learning approach
Blooms taxonomy a revolutionary learning approachBlooms taxonomy a revolutionary learning approach
Blooms taxonomy a revolutionary learning approach
 
Bloom Taxonomy.pptx
Bloom Taxonomy.pptxBloom Taxonomy.pptx
Bloom Taxonomy.pptx
 
Affective Assessment
Affective AssessmentAffective Assessment
Affective Assessment
 
Chapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdf
Chapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdfChapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdf
Chapter 8 - Assessment in Affective Domain.pdf
 
Teaching Higher Order Thinking & 21st Century Skills
Teaching Higher Order Thinking & 21st Century SkillsTeaching Higher Order Thinking & 21st Century Skills
Teaching Higher Order Thinking & 21st Century Skills
 
meeting2 blooms taxonomy revised.pptx
meeting2 blooms taxonomy revised.pptxmeeting2 blooms taxonomy revised.pptx
meeting2 blooms taxonomy revised.pptx
 
Cognitive Domain
Cognitive DomainCognitive Domain
Cognitive Domain
 
Revised version of bloom taxonomy
 Revised version of bloom taxonomy Revised version of bloom taxonomy
Revised version of bloom taxonomy
 
Transformative learning
Transformative learningTransformative learning
Transformative learning
 
Domains of learning
Domains of learningDomains of learning
Domains of learning
 

Último

會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
中 央社
 
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdfFinancial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
MinawBelay
 
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
Krashi Coaching
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 

Último (20)

size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceuticssize separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
size separation d pharm 1st year pharmaceutics
 
UChicago CMSC 23320 - The Best Commit Messages of 2024
UChicago CMSC 23320 - The Best Commit Messages of 2024UChicago CMSC 23320 - The Best Commit Messages of 2024
UChicago CMSC 23320 - The Best Commit Messages of 2024
 
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
 
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdfFinancial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
 
Software testing for project report .pdf
Software testing for project report .pdfSoftware testing for project report .pdf
Software testing for project report .pdf
 
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
 
“O BEIJO” EM ARTE .
“O BEIJO” EM ARTE                       .“O BEIJO” EM ARTE                       .
“O BEIJO” EM ARTE .
 
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General QuizPragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
 
PSYPACT- Practicing Over State Lines May 2024.pptx
PSYPACT- Practicing Over State Lines May 2024.pptxPSYPACT- Practicing Over State Lines May 2024.pptx
PSYPACT- Practicing Over State Lines May 2024.pptx
 
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
 
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
 
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
Capitol Tech Univ Doctoral Presentation -May 2024
 
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdfMichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
MichaelStarkes_UncutGemsProjectSummary.pdf
 
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjStl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Stl Algorithms in C++ jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
 
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
 
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
 
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING IIII BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
 
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in HinduismAn overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
 
An Overview of the Odoo 17 Knowledge App
An Overview of the Odoo 17 Knowledge AppAn Overview of the Odoo 17 Knowledge App
An Overview of the Odoo 17 Knowledge App
 

Bloom’s Taxonomy PowerPoint Presentation 2017

  • 1. Bloom’s Taxonomy AAMIR HUSSAIN SHAHANI M.A EPM NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF MODERN LANGUAGES ISLAMABAD 14 DECEMBER 2017 EMAIL: hussainiaamir512@gmail.com
  • 2. Who is Benjamin Bloom?  - A Jewish-American educational psychologist  Contributions:  1. Classification of educational objectives  2. Theory of Mastery-Learning
  • 3. What is TAXONOMY?  Comes from two Greek words:  Taxis: arrangement  Nomos: science  Science of arrangements  A set of classification principles, or structure and Domain simply means category.
  • 4. BACKGROUND  In 1956, Benjamin Bloom with collaborators Max Englehart, Edward Furst, Walter Hill, and David Krathwohl  published a framework for categorizing educational goals:  Taxonomy of Educational Objectives  this framework has been applied by generations of teachers and college instructors in their teaching.
  • 5. DEFINITION Bloom’s taxonomy is a classification system used to define and distinguish different levels of human cognition—i.e., thinking, learning, and understanding.
  • 6. PURPOSE The purpose of Bloom’s Taxonomy is to help educators to inform or guide the development of assessments (tests and other evaluations of student learning), curriculum (units, lessons, projects, and other learning activities), and instructional methods such as questioning strategies.
  • 7. BLOOM’S TAXONOMY  ORGINAL TAXONOMY (1956)  By BLOOM  REVISED TAXONOMY (2001)  By LORIN ANDERSON  A farmer student of Bloom
  • 8. The Original Taxonomy (1956)  The Three Domains Of Learning:  Cognitive: mental skills (knowledge)  Affective: growth in feelings or emotional areas (attitude or self)  Psychomotor: manual or physical skills (skills)  Instructional designers, trainers, and educators often refer to these three categories as KSA
  • 9. COGNITIVE DOMAIN  The cognitive domain involves knowledge and the development of intellectual skills.  This includes the recall or recognition of specific facts, procedural patterns, and concepts that serve in the development of intellectual abilities and skills. There are six major categories of cognitive processes, starting from the simplest to the most complex
  • 11. KNOWLEDGE “involves the recall of specifics and universals, the recall of methods and processes, or the recall of a pattern, structure, or setting.” Student can: Write, List, Define with his knowledge if he have.
  • 12. COPREHENSION  Refers to a type of understanding or apprehension such that the individual knows what is being communicated.  Student translates, comprehends or interprets information based on prior learning like:  Explain, summarize, paraphrase, describe
  • 13. APPLICATION  Refers to the “use of abstractions in particular and concrete situations.”  Student selects, transfers and uses data and principles to complete a problem with a minimum of direction.  How student can use, compute,solve and apply his knowledge.  Example: 100-15=85
  • 14. ANALYSIS  Breakdown of a communication into its constituent elements or parts.  Student distinguishes, classifies and relates the evidence or structure of a statement or question.  Student can analyze, categorize, compare and separate.  Example: old capital of Pakistan? New capital?  Why? (Analysis)
  • 15. SYNTHESIS  Involves the “putting together of elements and parts so as to form a whole.”  Student originates, integrates, and combines ideas into a product, plan or proposal that is new to him.  He can create, design, invent and develop  He can combine different types of information to find alternative solutions.  Example: he can combine this to make a sentence:  Mother – invention –is- necessary - the
  • 16. EVALUATION Judgments about the value of material and methods for given purposes. Student can judge what he learned whether it is right or wrong. If wrong than he can start the process again. Student can judge, recommend, critique and justify.
  • 17. The Affective Domain  Skills in the affective domain describe the way people react emotionally and their ability to feel other living things' pain or joy. Affective objectives typically target the awareness and growth in attitudes, emotion, and feelings.  There are five levels in the affective domain moving through the lowest-order processes to the highest:  Receiving  Responding  Valuing  Organizing  characterizing
  • 18. RECEIVING The lowest level; the student passively pays attention. Without this level, no learning can occur. Receiving is about the student's memory and recognition as well. EXAMPLE: Student saw a person helping poor...
  • 19. RESPONDING The student actively participates in the learning process, not only attends to a stimulus; the student also reacts in some way. EXAMPLE: He saw that people appreciating the person who helped poor…
  • 20. VALUING The student attaches a value to an object, phenomenon, or piece of information. The student associates a value or some values to the knowledge they acquired.  Example: He gives value that helping poor is an appreciable work…
  • 21. ORGANIZING The student can put together different values, information, and ideas, and can accommodate them within his/her own schema; the student is comparing, relating and elaborating on what has been learned.  Example: Than he organizes his learning that how he can help poor…
  • 22. CHARACTARIZING The student at this level tries to build abstract knowledge. Example: At this stage the habit becomes the part of his character.
  • 23. The Psychomotor Domain (action- based)  Skills in the psychomotor domain describe the ability to physically manipulate a tool or instrument like a hand or a hammer. Psychomotor objectives usually focus on change and/or development in behavior and/or skills.  Bloom and his colleagues never created subcategories for skills in the psychomotor domain.
  • 24. Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy (2001)  Lorin Anderson, a former student of Bloom, and David Krathwohl revisited the cognitive domain and made some changes.  They mad these changes:  changing the names in the six categories from noun to verb forms.  creating a processes and levels of knowledge matrix.  rearranging them.
  • 25. Implications  Bloom's taxonomy serves as the backbone of many teaching philosophies, in particular, those that lean more towards skills rather than content.  Bloom's taxonomy can be used as a teaching tool to help balance assessment and evaluative questions in class, assignments and texts to ensure all orders of thinking are exercised in students' learning, including aspects of information searching.
  • 27. IMPLICATIONS  Bloom's taxonomy serves as the backbone of many teaching philosophies, in particular, those that lean more towards skills rather than content.  Bloom's taxonomy can be used as a teaching tool to help balance assessment and evaluative questions in class, assignments and texts to ensure all orders of thinking are exercised in students' learning, including aspects of information searching.