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bloom's taxonomy

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Emily Vickery

Tags: bloom's taxonomy educators on 2008-06-19 -Cached -About Shared by:Emily Vickery

Caroline O'Bannon

40 pages of examples of how the revised Bloom's Taxonomy applies to a variety of digital applications - Drawing 3 on page 5 is particularly good as it breaks down each level of Blooms into verbs. Example: creating = programming, filming, animating, blogging, video blogging, etc. Great stuff!

Tags: all_teachers bloom's taxonomy instructionaltechnology pedagogy professionaldevelopment resource techintegrator on 2008-05-02 -Cached -About Shared by:Caroline O'Bannon

Diane Hammond

A framework for examining higher order thinking skills in a digital world

Tags: all_teachers best_practice bloom's taxonomy professionaldevelopment on 2008-04-14 -Cached -About Shared by:Diane Hammond

Isabelle Jones

Tags: education learning research resources teaching training on 2008-04-13 -Cached -About Shared by:Isabelle Jonesand 2 member(s) first by: Elizabeth Hubbell

Anna Adam

Tags: bloom's taxonomy education taxonomy on 2008-06-19 -Cached -About Shared by:Anna Adamand 3 member(s) first by: Patti Porto

Jeff Johnson

Blooms Taxonomy Pyramid Bloom's Taxonomy defines six different levels of thinking. The levels build in increasing order of difficulty from basic, rote memorization to higher (more difficult and sophisticated) levels of critical thinking skills. For example, a test question that requires simple factual recall shows that you have knowledge of the subject. Answering an essay question often requires that you comprehend the facts and perhaps apply the information to a problem. I wish to promote the analysis the subject matter, perhaps by having students break a complex historical process or event into constituent parts. I particularly want students to organize and present pieces of historical evidence it in a new way, to create or synthesize an argument. In order to do so, students must evaluate evidence, making judgments about the validity and accuracy of primary sources.

Tags: bloom's taxonomy pedagogy revised teaching on 2008-09-16 -Cached -About Shared by:Jeff Johnson

Jeff Johnson

Benjamin Bloom created this taxonomy for categorizing level of abstraction of questions that commonly occur in educational settings. The taxonomy provides a useful structure in which to categorize test questions, since professors will characteristically ask questions within particular levels, and if you can determine the levels of questions that will appear on your exams, you will be able to study using appropriate strategies.

Tags: bloom's taxonomy education taxonomy on 2008-07-13 -Cached -About Shared by:Jeff Johnson

Dennis Richards

Educational Origami is a blog, and a wiki, about the integration of ICT into the classroom, this is one of the largest challenges that I feel we as teachers face. Its about 21st Century Learning and 21st Century Teaching. Marc Prensky coined the now popular and famous phrase "Digital natives and digital immigrants" in his two papers on digital Children. We the teachers are the immigrants and our students are the natives, brought up in a world where there has always been computers and the internet, where information is always instant and varied. Our teaching and their learning must reflect this.

Tags: rubrics web 2.0 wikis on 2008-05-29 -Cached -About Shared by:Dennis Richardsand 5 member(s) first by: Reggie Ryan

Jeff Johnson

There is more than one type of learning. A committee of colleges, led by Benjamin Bloom, identified three domains of educational activities:
- Cognitive: mental skills (Knowledge)
- Affective: growth in feelings or emotional areas (Attitude)
- Psychomotor: manual or physical skills (Skills)

Tags: bloom's taxonomy education learning taxonomy theory on 2008-07-13 -Cached -About Shared by:Jeff Johnson

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