Video Description
Bloom's Taxonomy is a framework used to classify and organize different levels of thinking and learning. It was first created by educational psychologist Benjamin Bloom in 1956 and later revised in 2001. The purpose of Bloom's Taxonomy is to help educators design curriculum and assessments that encourage higher-order thinking and a deeper understanding of content.
The taxonomy is typically divided into three domains:
1. Cognitive Domain (Thinking and knowledge-based): This is the most widely used and focuses on the mental skills or knowledge acquisition. It was originally categorized into six levels (from lowest to highest):
o Knowledge: Remembering information (facts, terms, basic concepts).
o Comprehension: Understanding meaning (interpreting, explaining).
o Application: Using information in new situations (solving problems).
o Analysis: Breaking down information into components (identifying patterns, relationships).
o Synthesis: Combining parts to create a new whole (designing, constructing).
o Evaluation: Making judgments or decisions based on criteria (justifying, critiquing).
In the 2001 revision, the levels were changed slightly to:
o Remember: Retrieving relevant knowledge.
o Understand: Constructing meaning from instructional messages.
o Apply: Carrying out or using a procedure.
o Analyze: Breaking material into parts to understand structure.
o Evaluate: Making judgments based on criteria and standards.
o Create: Putting elements together to form a novel pattern.
2. Affective Domain (Attitudes and feelings): This domain focuses on emotions, attitudes, and values, and it includes levels such as receiving, responding, valuing, organizing, and characterizing by value.
3. Psychomotor Domain (Physical skills): This domain refers to physical skills and actions, focusing on the development of motor skills, like coordination or the use of tools.
Overall, Bloom's Taxonomy helps educators structure learning objectives, activities, and assessments that progressively challenge students' cognitive abilities. It encourages a more structured approach to teaching and fosters higher-order thinking, where students not only remember information but analyze, evaluate, and create with it.