Instructional designing when aligned with taxonomies help the teacher deliver the best of content in a very effective manner. This leads to achieving learning outcomes through activities and resources and workflow chosen by the instructor. It also involves selecting a specific or an amalgamation of various teaching methodologies.
2. Taxonomy
• Taxonomies are a scheme of classification
• Educational Taxonomy
– Classification of educational objectives
– Terms used in a framework to classify simple
to complex and from concrete to abstract,
educational goals.
4. • Needs to be fulfilled to achieve full
potential
• Basic – complex -> Lower – higher
• In Maslow's words: " what a man can be,
a man must be"
– Self Actualization
Hierarchy of needs
6. Hierarchy of needs
• Physiological- Necessary to maintain life
• Safety- Needs to protect oneself or avoid
danger
• Love and belonging- Have a loving
relationship with people and have a place in
the society
• Esteem- Needs to be recognized as a
worthwhile person
• Self- actualization- Reach full potential in the
best manner
8. Bloom'’s Taxonomy
• Benjamin Bloom in the 1950s
• Common objectives of classroom instruction
• Cognitive domain
• Selecting the appropriate action verbs for course
objectives
• Higher order thinking skills are more difficult and
build on the previous lower order thinking skills
• Entry level courses -> remembering,
understanding, and applying thinking skills
• Graduate level courses -> analyzing, evaluating,
and creating thinking skills
10. Remember
ing
Understandi
ng
Applying Analysing Evaluating Creating
Know Restate Use Analyze Assess Create
Memorize Compare Demonstrate Probe Award Design
Identify Contrast Provide Categorize Choose Assemble
Label Locate Respond Scrutinize Criticize Generate
List Explain Apply Compare Defend Build
Recall Recognise Restructure Conclude Estimate Change
Recognize Interpret Choose Contrast Judge Combine
Match Outline Develop Investigate Rate Formulate
Name Relate Model Dissect Support Elaborate
Select Show Organise Distinguish Justify Modify
Repeat Summarize Select Examine Measure Compose
Record Translate Illustrate Inspect Deduce Invent
Report Utilize Infer Compare Improve
Differentiate Build Assume Predict
Discover
11. Maslow before Bloom
• Humans need to meet their basic needs
before academic learning
• It is only at the third level of Maslow's need
hierarchy that the bloom's taxonomy can
begin
• How a person develops through Maslow’s
hierarchy directly impacts their capacity and
attention toward learning, both academic and
social-emotional learning.
13. Affective Domain
• Developed by Bloom and Krathwohl (1964)
• Objectives concerned with interests,
attitudes, adjustment, appreciation, and
values.
• Five categories arranged in order of
increased internalization.
• Internalization is the “process whereby a
person’s affect toward an object passes
from a general awareness level to a point
where the affect is internalized and
consistently guides or controls the
person’s behaviour.”- Wikipedia
14. Hierarchy of Affective Domain
• Receiving- sensitized to the existence of a
certain phenomena and ideas
• Responding- respond to the situation in a
committed manner
• Valuing- students set guidelines for their
behaviour
• Organization- develop their own code of
conduct and standard of public life in the
society
• Characterization- act in accordance with the
values that have been internalized and forms
part of the life style of the individual
17. Teaching Approaches for Active
Learning
• Frameworks:
– Inquiry based learning
– High Order Thinking
– Cooperative Learning
– Critical Thinking
– Student Centred Instruction
– Bloom's Taxonomy of Learning Outcome
18. Approaches
• Aligning content with objectives on the
basis of teaching approach
– Active Learning
– Problem Solving
– Project Based Learning
– Flipped Learning
19. Active Learning
• Umbrella Term
– Any learning task that puts the responsibility
of learning on the student.
– Passive i.e. Reading, Looking & Listening
– Active i.e. Speak, Say & Do
20. Problem Based Learning
• Hands on active learning, centre on the
investigation and resolution of real world
problems.
• Related to tacking a problem but not
necessarily include student project
21. Project Based Learning
• Students have significant control over
– What they wish to produce
– How they want to demonstrate their learning
– How they wish to be evaluated
• Involves complex task and some form of
student presentation and/or creating an
actual product or artefact.
22. Flipped Learning
• Passive Learning
– Acclimatized with new concepts and terminology
before the live session.
– Ask students to take notes and jot questions for
further consideration.
– Provide worksheets for each video, short quizzes on
video content
• Active Learning
– During live session: Brain storm ideas and discuss
with the instructor and peers
– Learning activities like group work, group discussion
• After Session:
– Check for understanding through higher order
assessment and activities
23. Interdisciplinary approach- what is
the focus.
• Activity
– Design a skit on "Global Warming"
– Theatre
– Language
– Science
• Remember what is the focus?
– Enhance acting
– Enhance language skills
– Exemplify a science phenomenon
24. Keep in touch
For more tutorials and free courses, please
visit:
https://www.codewizacademy.com/
https://www.facebook.com/codewizacademy/
https://www.instagram.com/codewizacademy/