globehall.com globehall.com
Main :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add URL
 
 

Academics & Learning

 

Sports

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Drink & Food

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Estate & Realty

 

Fashion & Relationships

 

Companies & Business

 

Issues & News

 

Indoor Games

 

Computers & Software

 

Self Management

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Technology & Science

 

Investment & Finance

 

Entertainment

 

Teens & Kids

 

Art & Creative

 

Garden & Home

 

Policies & Law

 

Shopping Online

 

People & Society

 

Main › Academics & Learning › Preparation & Planning
 

What is Blooms Taxonomy?

 
Author: Adam Waxler

What is Bloom's taxonomy and how can a teacher apply Bloom's taxonomy to classroom lesson plans?

Bloom's taxonomy was originally created Benjamin Bloom for categorizing and classifying levels of intellectual learning that commonly occur in the classroom setting. Bloom's taxonomy contains three overlapping domains: the cognitive, psychomotor, and affective. Within the cognitive domain Benjamin Bloom identified six levels that have become commonly known as Blooms Taxonomy.

The six levels of Bloom's taxonomy, from lowest to highest, are: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. These different levels of Bloom's taxonomy have become an extremely useful guide for teachers in planning classroom lesson plans and classroom objectives. You can even find a list of verbs to help teachers design lesson plans in the Bloom's Taxonomy Verb Chart located on this web site: http://www.teaching-tips-machine.com/blooms_taxonomy.htm

It is vitally important that teachers do not just teach lower order thinking skills at the bottom of Bloom's taxonomy such as knowledge and comprehension, but also teach higher order thinking skills at the top of Bloom's taxonomy such as evaluation. When students are evaluating and judging and using the higher order thinking skills they are more likely to retain information, perform better on standardized tests, and most importantly, achieve the ultimate goal of becoming lifelong learners.

There are many ways in which teachers can use blooms taxonomy to help create more focused lesson plans and help students use higher order thinking skills. By following the Bloom's taxonomy chart teachers can pinpoint what they will teach and how they will go about teaching it. For example, take a social studies lesson plan on the use of the atomic bomb to end WWII. A teacher could teach this lesson by having students read and memorize important key terms and facts. However, even if the teacher uses a variety of teaching strategies to help increase reading comprehension, the problem is the teacher is only focusing on the lower order thinking skills. The students may be able to regurgitate the information back on the test, but the student is not using the higher order thinking skills that will help that student retain the information for the long-term and, more importantly, help the student learn to think for himself.

A simply way to teach the same lesson, but also address the higher order thinking skills is to simply have the students write a paragraph "evaluating/judging" Truman's decision to drop the atomic bomb. The teacher can still have the students include the key terms from the lesson in the paragraph, but by having the students also make an argument and support that argument the students are also addressing the higher order thinking skills of Bloom's taxonomy.

Copyright 2005 Adam Waxler

Author Bio:

Adam Waxler publishes a series of weight loss information products including this new weight loss resource filled with with FREE weight loss articles @ www.1-800-Weight-Loss.com

You can search for this article using: individual education plan, technology education lesson plan, individualized education plan
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Homeschooling Has Advantages; Critics Say Kids Will Lack Socialization
 
Houston Schools New Teacher Merit Pay Program ... Will It Help or Hinder?
 
Metaphors of the Mind (Part I)
 
Why Can't Our Brain Process What We See Faster?
 
Boring Textbooks = Bored Kids + Bored Mom
 
How To's For A Successful In-Studio Raido Interview
 
Four Cognitive Skills for Successful Learning
 
Teaching What You Don't Know
 
Is Hypnosis a Science or an Art? ? It's All in the Mind
 
Online Book Marketing: How to Sell Your Book Even If You Are Not a Salesperson
 
 
 
   Main :> Security & Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
© 2008 www.globehall.com All Rights Reserved.