the revised bloom’s taxonomy (rbt): improving curriculum, instruction, and assessment in an...

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The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and Presented by Dr. Lorin Anderson Edited 2008 by Bill Ellis

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Page 1: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and

Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World

Developed and Presented by

Dr. Lorin AndersonEdited 2008 by Bill Ellis

Page 2: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

A FUNDAMENTAL TRUTHWe don’t see the world as it is; we see

the world through the lens through which we look at it.

Page 3: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Unfortunately, many educators appear to suffer from myopia. They see the trees but not the forest.

Furthermore, they believe that others see the world they way they do. To reinforce this belief they form “tribes” that include those who see things the way they do and exclude others.

The proliferation of tribes has led to a serious problem in education. In Ben Bloom’s words, we have chaos.

Page 4: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Taxonomies provide us with common lenses so we are able to see the world similarly and use common language to share our understanding of the world as we see it. Taxonomies are intended to break down the artificial barriers that exist between and among tribes.

The Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, Handbook 1, The Cognitive Domain, written in the early 1950s and published in 1956, was an initial attempt to produce a common framework in education.

Page 5: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

The Common Format of Objectives

Subject Verb Object

S V O

Page 6: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Verb = Create (a product based on)

Subject = The student (will be able to)

Object = The principles & elements of design

The student will be able to create a product based on the principles and elements of design

Page 7: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

The SUBJECT is the Learner or the Student.

The student (will)

The student (should)

The student (might)

Quite often, the subject is implicit or understood.

Page 8: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

The verbs provide clues as to the cognitive process category intended by the person or persons writing the standard. Adopted from the original

Bloom’s taxonomy of educational objectives, there are six cognitive

process categories.

Page 9: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Bloom Revised Bloom

• Remember

• Apply

• Understand

• Analyze

• Evaluate

• Create• Evaluation

• Analysis

• Synthesis

• Application

• Comprehension

• Knowledge

Page 10: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Remember

• Retrieve relevant knowledge from long term memory

– Recognizing– Recalling

Page 11: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Understand• Construct meaning from instructional

messages, including oral, written and graphic communication.

– Interpreting– Exemplifying– Classifying– Summarizing– Inferring– Comparing– Explaining

Page 12: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Apply

•  Carry out or use a procedure in a given situation.

– Executing

– Implementing

Page 13: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Analyze• Break material into its constituent parts

and determine how the parts relate to one another and to an overall structure or purpose.

– Differentiating

– Organizing

– Attributing

Page 14: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Evaluate

• Make judgments based on criteria and standards

– Checking

– Critiquing

Page 15: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Create• Put elements together to form a

coherent or functional whole; reorganize elements into a new pattern or structure

– Generating

– Planning

– Producing

Page 16: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Each of the six cognitive process categories was divided into specific cognitive processes. Nineteen (19) specific cognitive processes were identified.

Page 17: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

THE TAXONOMY TABLE

COGNITIVE PROCESS DIMENSION

1. REMEMBERRecognizing

Recalling

2.UNDERSTAND

InterpretingExemplifyingClassifying

SummarizingInferring

ComparingExplaining

3.APPLY

ExecutingImplementing

4.ANALYZE

DifferentiatingOrganizingAttributing

5.EVALUATECheckingCritiquing

6.CREATE

GeneratingPlanning

Producing

Page 18: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Unlike the verbs, the objects of the standards are subject-specific (e.g., math, science, social studies). The objects specify the CONTENT of the standard. For several reasons, CONTENT was replaced by KNOWLEDGE.

Page 19: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

What are Differences Between Content and Knowledge?

• Content is subject-matter specific. If you focused on content, then, you would need as many taxonomies as there are subject matters (e.g., one for science, one for history, etc.).

• Content exists outside the student. A major problem, then, is how to get the content inside the student. When content gets inside the student, it becomes knowledge. This transformation of content to knowledge takes place through the cognitive processes used by the student.

Page 20: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Four Types of Knowledge

• Factual Knowledge

• Conceptual Knowledge

• Procedural Knowledge

• Metacognitive Knowledge

Page 21: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Factual Knowledge• The basic elements

students must know to be acquainted with a discipline or solve problems in it.– Knowledge of

terminology– Knowledge of specific

details and elements

Page 22: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Conceptual Knowledge• The interrelationships among

the basic elements within a larger structure that enable them to function together.

– Knowledge of classifications and categories

– Knowledge of principles and generalizations

– Knowledge of theories, models and structures

Page 23: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Procedural Knowledge• How to do something,

methods of inquiry and criteria for using skills, algorithms, techniques and methods.– Knowledge of subject-specific skills

and algorithms– Knowledge of subject-specific

techniques and methods– Knowledge of criteria for

determining when to use appropriate procedures

Page 24: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Metacognitive Knowledge• Knowledge of cognition in general as well

as awareness and knowledge or one’s own cognition.– Strategic knowledge– Knowledge about cognitive tasks, including

appropriate contextual and conditional knowledge

– Self-knowledgeHow did I get that answer?

Page 25: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

THE TAXONOMY TABLE

COGNITIVE PROCESS DIMENSION

FACTUAL KNOWLEDGE

KNOWLEDGE

DIMENSION

1. REMEMBERRecognizing

Recalling

2.UNDERSTAND

InterpretingExemplifyingClassifying

SummarizingInferring

ComparingExplaining

3.APPLY

ExecutingImplementing

4.ANALYZE

DifferentiatingOrganizingAttributing

5.EVALUATECheckingCritiquing

6.CREATE

GeneratingPlanning

Producing

CONCEPTUAL KNOWLEDGE

PROCEDURAL KNOWLEDGE

METACOGNITIVE KNOWLEDGE

Page 26: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

THE TAXONOMY TABLE

D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1D. Metacognitive

Knowledge

C6 C5 C4 C3 C2 C1C. Procedural

Knowledge

B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1B. Conceptual

Knowledge

A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A. Factual Knowledge

1. REMEMBERRecognizing

Recalling

2.UNDERSTAND

InterpretingExemplifyingClassifying

SummarizingInferring

ComparingExplaining

3.APPLY

ExecutingImplementing

4.ANALYZE

DifferentiatingOrganizingAttributing

5.EVALUATECheckingCritiquing

6.CREATE

GeneratingPlanning

Producing

Page 27: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Some Examples of Objectives

• The student will be able to recognize the steps of the selling process (C1).[Sports & Entertainment]

• The student will be able to explain foodborne contaminants and food allergies (B2) [Foods II]

Page 28: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

More Examples

• The student will be able to demonstrate correct drawing procedures (C3) [Drafting]

• The student will be able to analyze transactions into debit and credit parts(B4) [Computerized Accounting]

Page 29: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

Still More Examples

• The student will be able to critique alternative medical modalities (D5) [Medical Sciences II]

• The student will be able to create a product based on the principles and elements of design (B6) [Fundamentals of Technology]

Page 30: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

One of the primary values of the Taxonomy Table is that it

helps us understand the intent and meaning of

objectives!

Page 31: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

With this understanding we can plan more effective

instruction, design more valid assessments, and increase

the alignment among objectives, assessments, and

instruction are aligned.

Page 32: The Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT): Improving Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in an Accountability-Driven, Standards-Based World Developed and

How Is This Possible? First, objectives in the same cells of the

taxonomy table are taught in the much the same way

Second, objectives in the same cells of the taxonomy table are assessed in much the same way

Third, using a common framework to examine objectives, instruction, and assessment leads to an increase in the alignment among objectives, assessments, and instruction.