Bloom’s Taxonomy Activities

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills
Advertisements

Bloom's Taxonomy.
? freely adapted from Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming.
Comparing the Original and the Revised Versions. Benjamin Bloom (1956) developed a classification of levels of intellectual behavior in learning. This.
Bloom's Taxonomy of Cognitive Development
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies
OF THE COGNITIVE DOMAIN
Creating: can the student create new product or point of view?
OF THE COGNITIVE DOMAIN
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies
Assessment and differentiation with Bloom’s Taxonomy
Lesson Planning Notes Title of Activity: n Lesson Plan Concept.
Bloom’s Taxonomy Knowledge Comprehension Application Analysis
Sample Questions Task-Based Activities Define each level shallow processing, simply recalling Demonstrate understanding Knowing when and why to apply.
Quick Flip Questioning for Critical Thinking Kobets S.A. Lyceum №87.
Reader’s Notebook Goal: I will use my Reader’s Notebook to help facilitate my comprehension of my novel by completing activities using reading skills and.
Increasing Critical Thinking POWER VERBS with. Remembering Level.
Writing Objectives Including Bloom’s Taxanomy. Three Primary Components of an Objective Condition –What they’re given Behavior –What they do Criteria.
Bloom’s Taxonomy And we don’t mean Evan Bloom!. Have you ever wondered… How do we really learn information? What is the goal of learning? What do our.
Academic Vocabulary. Analysis The process or result of identifying the parts of a whole and their relationships to one another.
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies A Guide to Higher Level Thinking Ruth SundaKyrene de las Brisas.
BBI3420 PJJ 2009/2010 Dr. Zalina Mohd. Kasim.  Bloom’s taxonomy of Educational Objectives (1956) provides 6 levels of thinking and questioning. A close.
A Blooming Table 6 Steps to “Critical Thinking” Benjamin Bloom theorized that there are 6 levels of thinking. 6. Synthesis 5. Evaluation 4. Analysis.
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies A Guide to Higher Level Thinking Adapted from Ruth Sunda and Kyrene de las Brisas.
BLOOM’S TAXONOMY OF THE COGNITIVE DOMAIN. BLOOM’S TAXONOMY Benjamin Bloom (et al.) created this taxonomy for categorizing levels of abstraction of questions.
BLOOM’S TAXONOMY Mrs. Eagen A, A. Bloom identified six levels within the cognitive domain, from the simple recall or recognition of facts,
Bloom’s Taxonomy A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills.
COMPREHENSION ANALYSIS EVALUATION APPLICATION SYNTHESIS KNOWLEDGE
Level 1 Tell List Describe Locate Write State Name What happened after? How many? Who was it that...? Describe what happened at...? Who spoke to...? Can.
CLE 076 Development Team Meeting #2 12/4/2015 CLE Introduction to Agile Software Acquisition1.
Bloom’s Taxonomy By Valerie Farinas. What Is It? Bloom’s taxonomy is a multi-tiered model of classifying thinking according to 6 cognitive levels of complexity.
What is the Purpose of Education? A way of thinking.
Remembering Key words: who, what, why, when, where, which, choose, find, how, define, label, show, spell, list, match, name, relate, tell, recall, select.
Bloom’s Taxonomy Dr. Middlebrooks. Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Higher Level Thinking Skills
?. Why ask questions????? 11( RED ) – INPUT COMPLETE, COUNT, DEFINE, DESCRIBE, IDENTIFY, SCAN LIST, MATCH, NAME, OBSERVE, RECITE, 22( YELLOW ) –P ROCESS.
BLOOMS OBJECTIVESLEVEL. Bloom’s Six Levels Knowledge Knowledge Comprehension Comprehension Application Application Analysis Analysis Synthesis Synthesis.
Bloom’s Taxonomy How to Create REALLY good questions!!
Workshop 2014 Cam Xuyen, October 14, 2014 Testing/ assessment/ evaluation BLOOM’S TAXONOMY.
BLOOM’S TAXONOMY OF THE COGNITIVE DOMAIN. BLOOM’S TAXONOMY CompetenceSkills Demonstrated Knowledge The recall of specific information Comprehension Understanding.
Assessment.
Using Bloom’s Taxonomy
Assessment.
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies
Lesson Planning Notes 6.5.
A classification of learning objectives within education
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies
A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills
85. BLOOM’S TAXONOMY “Bloom’s Taxonomy is a guide to educational learning objectives. It is the primary focus of most traditional education.”
Author: Brenda Stephenson The University of Tennessee
Year 2: How to help your child
Higher Level Thinking Skills
Reader’s Notebook Goal: I will use my Reader’s Notebook to help facilitate my comprehension of my novel by completing activities using reading skills.
Test-Taking Vocabulary
Who’s Who at BTW Facts.
Your students Your course Your teaching
BBI3420 PJJ 2009/2010 Dr. Zalina Mohd. Kasim
Writing Learning Outcomes
Bloom’s Taxonomy: Six Levels for Understanding
Knowledge Arrange Define Duplicate Label List
Lesson Planning Notes 6.5.
What you assess makes a statement about what you value
A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills
Costa’s Levels of Questioning
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies
Our goal is to be thinking at a higher level.
Classifying Questions
Using Phonemic Awareness &
? INQUIRY to question is to learn.
Bloom’s Critical Thinking Questioning Strategies
Presentation transcript:

Bloom’s Taxonomy Activities 4/27/2019 Bloom’s Taxonomy Activities Knowledge This level provides the student an opportunity to recall fundamental facts and information about the story. Success at this level will be evidenced by the student’s ability to . . . Match character names with pictures of the characters. Identify the main characters in a crossword puzzle. Match statements with the characters who said them. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities List the main characteristics of one of the main characters in a WANTED poster. Arrange scrambled story pictures in sequential order. Arrange scrambled story sentences in sequential order. Recall details about the setting by creating a picture of where a part of the story took place. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Comprehension This level provides the student an opportunity to demonstrate a basic understanding of the story. Success at this level will be evidenced by the student’s ability to . . .  Interpret pictures of scenes from the story.  Explain selected ideas or parts from the story in his/her own words.  Draw a picture showing what happened before and after a passage or illustration found in the book. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Predict what could happen next in the story before the reading of the entire book is completed. Construct a pictorial time line which summarizes what happens in the story. Explain how the main character felt at the beginning, middle, and/or end of the story. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Application This level provides the student an opportunity to use information from the story in a new way. Success at this level will be evidenced by the student’s ability to . . . Classify the characters as human, animal, or thing. Transfer a main character to a new setting. Make finger puppets and act out a part of the story. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Select a meal that one of the main characters would enjoy eating; plan a menu, and a method of serving it. Think of a situation that occurred to a character in the story and write about how he or she would have handled the situation differently. Give examples of people the student knows who have the same problems as the characters in the story. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Analysis This level provides the student an opportunity to take parts of the story and examine these parts carefully in order to better understand the whole story. Success at this level will be evidenced by the student’s ability to . . . Identify general characteristics (stated and/or implied) of the main characters. Distinguish what could happen from what couldn’t happen in the story in real life. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Select parts of the story that were funniest, saddest, happiest, and most unbelievable. Differentiate fact from opinion. Compare and/or contrast two of the main characters. Select an action of a main character that was exactly the same as something the student would have done. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Synthesis This level provides the student with opportunity to put parts from the story together in a new way to form a new idea or product. Success at this level will be evidenced by the student’s ability to . . . Write three new titles for the story that would give a good idea what it is about. Create a poster to advertise the story so people will want to read it. Create a new product related to the story. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Restructure the roles of the main characters to create new outcomes in the story. Compose and perform a dialogue or monologue that will communicate the thoughts of the main characters at a given point in the story. Imagine that he or she is one of the main characters and write a diary account of daily thoughts and activities. Create an original character and tell how the character would fit into the story. Write the lyrics and music to a song that one of the main characters would sing if he/she became a rock star—and then perform it. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Evaluation This level provides the student with an opportunity to form and present an opinion backed by sound reasoning. Success at this level will be evidenced by the student’s ability to . . . Decide which character in the selection he or she would most like to spend a day with and why. Judge whether or not a character should have acted in a particular way and why. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities

Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities 4/27/2019 Decide if the story really could have happened and justify the decision. Consider how this story can help the student in his or her own life. Appraise the value of the story. Compare the story with another one the student has read. Write a recommendation as to why the book (story) should be read or not. 4/27/2019 Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities Didar-Millennium School/Bloom Activities