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Bloom's Taxonomy
College examiners attended
the American Psychological
Association Convention (1948)
and started to hold anual
meetings in Boston.
 A system for the classification of educational goals and
thinking behaviours that were important in the learning
process, so that examiners might have a more reliable
system for assessing students and educational
outcomes.
 A means of insuring accuracy of communication about
the educational field
 A means of understanding the organization and
interrelation of educational objectives.
 Intended to be appliable for any perspective in education
Bloom's Taxonomy
1. Cognitive
Domain
2. Affective
Domain
3. Psychomotor
Domain
“The recall or recognition
of knowledge and the
development of
intellectual abilities
and skills”
“Changes in interest,
attitudes, and values,
& the development of
appreciations and
adequate adjustment
[of them].”
“The manipulative or
motor-kill area.”
Cognitive Domain
Cognitive Domain
“The recall of specifics and universals,
methods and processes, pattern,
structure, or setting”
 “Knowledge objectives emphasize
most the psychological processes of
remembering.”
 “The process of relating is also
involved... appropriate signals, cues,
and clues ”

Concrete referents.

Elements from which more
complex forms are built.

Define terms by giving their
attributes, propierties and
relations

Familiarity with a larger
number of words in heir
common range of meanings
Cognitive Domain
1. Knowledge

Knowledge of classifications and categories:
Knowledge of the classes, sets, divisions and
arrangements which are regarded as fundamental for a
given subject field

Knowledge of conventions:
Characteristic ways of treating and presenting things.
For example:To make pupils conscious of correct form and
usage in speech and writing
“Lowest level of
understanding.”
The individual can make use of
the material or idea being
communicated, explaining it
in his/her own words.
The explanation or
summarization of a
communication.
It also involves reordering,
rearrangement, or a new view of
the material.
Cognitive Domain
2. Comprehension
Translation:
 Comprehension as evidenced by the care and accuracy
with which the communication is [correctly] paraphrased
or rendered from one one language or form of
communication to another.
 Judged on the basis of faithfulness and accuracy, that is,
on the extent to which the material in the original
communication is preserved although the form of the
communication has been altered.
 For example: "The ability to understand non-literal
statements metaphor, symbolism, irony, exaggeration).”
“The use of abstractions in particular and
[new] concrete situations.”
“The abstractions may be in the form of
general ideas, rules of procedures, or
generalized methods.”
 “The abstractions may also be technical
principles or ideas which must be
remembered and applied.”
*The ability to
predict the probable
effect of a change
Cognitive Domain
3. Application
“The breakdown of a [input] into its
constituent elements or parts such that the
relative hierarchy of ideas is made clear
and/or the relations between the ideas
expressed are made explicit.”
 “Intended to clarify the communication,
to indicate how the communication is
organized, and the way in which it manages
to convey its effects, as well as its basis and
arrangement.”
Cognitive Domain
4. Analysis
Analysis of relationships
*Organization
*Systematic arrangement
*Structure – explicit and “implicit”
*The ability to recognize form and pattern artistic works as a
means of understanding in literary or their meaning.
*The ability to recognize unstated assumptions.
*Skill in distinguishing facts from hypotheses.
“The putting together of elements and parts
so as to form a whole.
This involves the process of working with
pieces, parts, elements, etc., and arranging
and combining them in such a way as to
constitute a pattern or structure not
clearly there before.”
Cognitive Domain
5. Sythesis
Production of unique communication

Skill in writing, using an excellent organization of ideas and
statements.

Ability to write creatively a story, essay, or verse for personal
pleasure, or for the entertainment or information of others.

Ability to tell a personal experience effectively.

Ability to make extemporaneous speeches.

Ability to write simple musical compositions, as in setting a
short poem to music.

Ability to plan a unit of instruction teaching situation for a
particular
Production of a plan,
or proposed set of operations

“Judgments about the value of material
and methods for given purposes.

Quantitative and qualitative judgments
about the extent to which material and
methods satisfy criteria.

Use of a standard of appraisal.

The criteria may be those determined by
the student or those which are given to
him.
Cognitive Domain
6. Evaluation
Affective Domain
Affective domain

Reception: Pay attention in a passive way. There is no
learning as such but students open the channel to receive
information as long as there is motivation.

Response: Participate actively. Not only responding to
stimulus, but reacting by iniciative.

Value: The person assigns a value to an object,
phenomenon or information.

Organization: Individuals compare and relate what they
have learned from others and group them, structure them,
arrange them, or reconcile them within their personal
scheme.

Internalization: Practicing values, beliefs or things that
now become a personal quality of the individual
Affective domain
Psychomotor Domain
Psychomotor domain

Imitate: copy actions by observation

Manipulate: reproduce actions from memory or
instruction

Perfect: perform actions with expertise, withut
help. Demonstrate and explain them to others

Articulate: adapt skills to different contexts using
alternative tools or instruments

Embody: perform actions in an automatic, intuitive
or unconscious way appropiate to the context
Athletic fields, arts, music, cooking, etc.

Simpson (1966), Dave (1970), and Harrow (1972), went on to
Bloom's Revised Taxonomies

Anderson and Krathwohl (2001)

Barbara Clark (2002): Circular representations. Many
people have since represented Bloom’s original, and
the revised, cognitive domain in this way.

Simon Paul Atkinson (2012)
Selected Bibliography

Atkinson, Simon Paul. Taxonomy Circles – Visualisations of Educational Domains.
November 13, 2012.

Bloom, Benjamin S. (1956)..
New York : McKay; London : Longman.

Guskey, Thomas R. (2012). Benjamin S. Bloom: Portraits of an Educator. R&L
Education.

Jeffrey Dalto. Teaching Attitudes: The Affective Domain of Learning and Learning
Objectives.

Lorin W. Anderson,& David R. Krathwohl (2000). Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching,
and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. Pearson.

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Bloom's Taxonomy

  • 1. Bloom's Taxonomy College examiners attended the American Psychological Association Convention (1948) and started to hold anual meetings in Boston.
  • 2.  A system for the classification of educational goals and thinking behaviours that were important in the learning process, so that examiners might have a more reliable system for assessing students and educational outcomes.  A means of insuring accuracy of communication about the educational field  A means of understanding the organization and interrelation of educational objectives.  Intended to be appliable for any perspective in education Bloom's Taxonomy
  • 3. 1. Cognitive Domain 2. Affective Domain 3. Psychomotor Domain “The recall or recognition of knowledge and the development of intellectual abilities and skills” “Changes in interest, attitudes, and values, & the development of appreciations and adequate adjustment [of them].” “The manipulative or motor-kill area.”
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8. “The recall of specifics and universals, methods and processes, pattern, structure, or setting”  “Knowledge objectives emphasize most the psychological processes of remembering.”  “The process of relating is also involved... appropriate signals, cues, and clues ”  Concrete referents.  Elements from which more complex forms are built.  Define terms by giving their attributes, propierties and relations  Familiarity with a larger number of words in heir common range of meanings Cognitive Domain 1. Knowledge
  • 9.  Knowledge of classifications and categories: Knowledge of the classes, sets, divisions and arrangements which are regarded as fundamental for a given subject field  Knowledge of conventions: Characteristic ways of treating and presenting things. For example:To make pupils conscious of correct form and usage in speech and writing
  • 10. “Lowest level of understanding.” The individual can make use of the material or idea being communicated, explaining it in his/her own words. The explanation or summarization of a communication. It also involves reordering, rearrangement, or a new view of the material. Cognitive Domain 2. Comprehension
  • 11. Translation:  Comprehension as evidenced by the care and accuracy with which the communication is [correctly] paraphrased or rendered from one one language or form of communication to another.  Judged on the basis of faithfulness and accuracy, that is, on the extent to which the material in the original communication is preserved although the form of the communication has been altered.  For example: "The ability to understand non-literal statements metaphor, symbolism, irony, exaggeration).”
  • 12. “The use of abstractions in particular and [new] concrete situations.” “The abstractions may be in the form of general ideas, rules of procedures, or generalized methods.”  “The abstractions may also be technical principles or ideas which must be remembered and applied.” *The ability to predict the probable effect of a change Cognitive Domain 3. Application
  • 13. “The breakdown of a [input] into its constituent elements or parts such that the relative hierarchy of ideas is made clear and/or the relations between the ideas expressed are made explicit.”  “Intended to clarify the communication, to indicate how the communication is organized, and the way in which it manages to convey its effects, as well as its basis and arrangement.” Cognitive Domain 4. Analysis
  • 14. Analysis of relationships *Organization *Systematic arrangement *Structure – explicit and “implicit” *The ability to recognize form and pattern artistic works as a means of understanding in literary or their meaning. *The ability to recognize unstated assumptions. *Skill in distinguishing facts from hypotheses.
  • 15. “The putting together of elements and parts so as to form a whole. This involves the process of working with pieces, parts, elements, etc., and arranging and combining them in such a way as to constitute a pattern or structure not clearly there before.” Cognitive Domain 5. Sythesis
  • 16. Production of unique communication  Skill in writing, using an excellent organization of ideas and statements.  Ability to write creatively a story, essay, or verse for personal pleasure, or for the entertainment or information of others.  Ability to tell a personal experience effectively.  Ability to make extemporaneous speeches.  Ability to write simple musical compositions, as in setting a short poem to music.  Ability to plan a unit of instruction teaching situation for a particular Production of a plan, or proposed set of operations
  • 17.  “Judgments about the value of material and methods for given purposes.  Quantitative and qualitative judgments about the extent to which material and methods satisfy criteria.  Use of a standard of appraisal.  The criteria may be those determined by the student or those which are given to him. Cognitive Domain 6. Evaluation
  • 19.
  • 20. Affective domain  Reception: Pay attention in a passive way. There is no learning as such but students open the channel to receive information as long as there is motivation.  Response: Participate actively. Not only responding to stimulus, but reacting by iniciative.  Value: The person assigns a value to an object, phenomenon or information.  Organization: Individuals compare and relate what they have learned from others and group them, structure them, arrange them, or reconcile them within their personal scheme.  Internalization: Practicing values, beliefs or things that now become a personal quality of the individual
  • 23.
  • 24. Psychomotor domain  Imitate: copy actions by observation  Manipulate: reproduce actions from memory or instruction  Perfect: perform actions with expertise, withut help. Demonstrate and explain them to others  Articulate: adapt skills to different contexts using alternative tools or instruments  Embody: perform actions in an automatic, intuitive or unconscious way appropiate to the context Athletic fields, arts, music, cooking, etc.  Simpson (1966), Dave (1970), and Harrow (1972), went on to
  • 25. Bloom's Revised Taxonomies  Anderson and Krathwohl (2001)  Barbara Clark (2002): Circular representations. Many people have since represented Bloom’s original, and the revised, cognitive domain in this way.  Simon Paul Atkinson (2012)
  • 26.
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30. Selected Bibliography  Atkinson, Simon Paul. Taxonomy Circles – Visualisations of Educational Domains. November 13, 2012.  Bloom, Benjamin S. (1956).. New York : McKay; London : Longman.  Guskey, Thomas R. (2012). Benjamin S. Bloom: Portraits of an Educator. R&L Education.  Jeffrey Dalto. Teaching Attitudes: The Affective Domain of Learning and Learning Objectives.  Lorin W. Anderson,& David R. Krathwohl (2000). Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. Pearson.

Editor's Notes

  1. 34 scholars + asked for comments, suggestions, criticism from colleagues, teachers, groups of educators and educational research workers. Based on the work of countless test instructiors, curriculum workers and teachers. One of the most frequently referred to and applied instructional design systems in the field of education Great impact on the U.S. But greater internationally. Translated to more than 20 languages. Shangai, China. It has served as a basis for curriculum development, reform. Test construction, lesson planning and teacher training.
  2. In the same way that “classification, esp. of animals and plants according to their natural relationships.” Attempt to classify the nature of everything a person learns. Not only classification, but to picture how profoundly we learn Principles:1. Focused on intended learning outcomes rather than student-learning processes. 2. Ditinctions make among them. 3. Logically developed and internally consistent. 4. Consistent with present understanding of psychological phenomena 5. Purely descriptive---.
  3. [Objectives which deal with...] Cognitive Domain: “the domain in which most of the work in curriculum development has taken place” Affective Domain: “has to do with the [Acquisition] or changes of
  4. 90% of instructional time spent at this level "Cognitive" is used to include activities such as remembering and recalling knowledge, thinking, problem solving, creating.” The hierarchical character of the taxonomy enables the ,user to more clearly understand the place of a particular objective in relation to other objectives”
  5. "Cognitive" is used to include activities such as remembering and recalling knowledge, thinking, problem solving, creating.” The hierarchical character of the taxonomy enables the ,user to more clearly understand the place of a particular objective in relation to other objectives”
  6. 6 types of cognitive processes
  7. A knowledge test situation requires the organization and reorganization of a problem such that it will furnish the appropriate signals and cues for the information and knowledge the individual possesses.
  8. Apuntan a la conciencia, habilidad para sentir empatía hacia otras personas. Comprender su alegría o dolor. Actitud, emoción y sentimientos.
  9. Apuntan a la conciencia, habilidad para sentir empatía hacia otras personas. Comprender su alegría o dolor. Actitud, emoción y sentimientos.
  10. The ability to think AND use our own body and/or its relation to other objects
  11. For teaching
  12. Questions