Bloom's
Taxonomy Blooms Digitally
By Andrew Churches, April 1, 2008
Introduction
and Background:
Bloom's Taxonomy
In the 1950's Benjamin Bloom developed
his taxonomy of cognitive objectives,
Bloom's Taxonomy. This categorized and ordered
thinking skills and objectives. His taxonomy
follows the thinking process. You can not
understand a concept if you do not first
remember it, similarly you can not apply
knowledge and concepts if you do not understand
them. It is a continuum from Lower Order
Thinking Skills (LOTS) to Higher Order Thinking
Skills (HOTS). Bloom labels each category
with a gerund.
Bloom's Revised Taxonomy
In the 1990's, a former student of Bloom,
Lorin Anderson, revised Bloom's Taxonomy
and published this- Bloom's Revised Taxonomy
in 2001.Key to this is the use of verbs rather
than nouns for each of the categories and
a rearrangement of the sequence within the
taxonomy. They are arranged below in increasing
order, from low to high.
Bloom's Revised Taxonomy Sub Categories
Each of the categories or taxonomic elements
has a number of key verbs associated with
it
Lower Order Thinking Skills (LOTS)
- Remembering - Recognising, listing,
describing, identifying, retrieving,
naming, locating, finding
- Understanding - Interpreting, Summarising,
inferring, paraphrasing, classifying,
comparing, explaining, exemplifying
- Applying - Implementing, carrying
out, using, executing
- Analysing - Comparing, organising,
deconstructing, Attributing, outlining,
finding, structuring, integrating
- Evaluating - Checking, hypothesising,
critiquing, Experimenting, judging,
testing, Detecting, Monitoring
- Creating - designing, constructing,
planning, producing, inventing, devising,
making
Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS)
The elements cover many of the activities
and objectives but they do not address
the new objectives presented by the emergence
and integration of Information and Communication
Technologies into the classroom and the
lives of our students.
Bloom's digital taxonomy map
Key:
Elements coloured in black are recognised
and existing verbs, Elements coloured in
blue are new digital verbs.
Remembering
This element of the taxonomy does infer
the retrieval of material. This is a key
element given the growth in knowledge and
information.
The digital additions and their explanations
are as follows:
- Bullet pointing – This
is analogous to listing but in a digital
format.
- Highlighting – This
is a key element of most productivity
suites; encouraging students to pick
out and highlight key words and phrases
is a technique for recall.
- Bookmarking or favorite-ing – this
is where the students mark for later
use web sites, resources and files. Students
can then organise these.
- Social networking – this
is where people develop networks of friends
and associates. It forges and creates
links between different people. Like
social bookmarks (see below) a social
network can form a key element of collaborating
and networking.
- Social bookmarking – this
is an online version of local bookmarking
or favorites, It is more advanced because
you can draw on others' bookmarks and
tags. While higher order thinking skills
like collaborating and sharing, can and
do make use of these skills, this is
its simplest form - a simple list of
sites saved to an online format rather
than locally to the machine.
- Searching or "Googling" -
Search engines are now key elements of
students' research. At its simplest the
student is just entering a key word or
phrase into the basic entry pane of the
search engine. This skill does not refine
the search beyond the key word or term.
Key
Terms - Remembering:
Recognizing, listing, describing,
identifying, retrieving, naming,
locating, finding, Bullet pointing,
highlighting, bookmarking, social
networking, Social bookmarking, favorite-ing/local
bookmarking, Searching, Googling. |
Understanding
The digital additions and their explanations
are as follows:
- Advanced and Boolean Searching – This
is a progression from the previous category.
Students require a greater depth of understanding
to be able to create, modify and refine
searches to suit their search needs.
- Blog Journaling – This
is the simplest of the uses for a blog,
where a student simply "talks" "writes" or "types" a
daily- or task-specific journal. This
shows a basic understanding of the activity
reported upon. The blog can be used to
develop higher level thinking when used
for discussion and collaboration.
- Twittering – The
Twitter site's fundamental question is "what
are you doing?" This can be, in its most
simplistic form, a one or two word answer,
but when developed this is a tool that
lends itself to developing understanding
and potentially starting collaboration.
- Categorizing – digital
classification - organizing and classifying
files, web sites and materials using
folders etc.
- Commenting and annotating – a
variety of tools exist that allow the
user to comment and annotate on web pages,
.pdf files and other documents. The user
is developing understanding by simply
commenting on the pages. This is analogous
with writing notes on hand outs, but
is potentially more powerful as you can
link and index these.
- Subscribing – Subscription
takes bookmarking in its various forms
and simplistic reading one level further.
The act of subscription by itself does
not show or develop understanding but
often the process of reading and revisiting
the subscribed-to feeds leads to greater
understanding.
Key
Terms - Understanding:
Interpreting, Summarizing, inferring,
paraphrasing, classifying, comparing,
explaining, exemplifying, Advanced
searching, Boolean searching, blog
journaling, twittering, categorising
and tagging, commenting, annotating,
subscribing. |
Applying
The digital additions and their justifications
are as follows:
- Running and operating – This
is the action of initiating a program
or operating and manipulating hardware
and applications to obtain a basic goal
or objective.
- Playing – The
increasing emergence of games as a mode
of education leads to the inclusion of
this term in the list. Students who successfully
play or operate a game are showing understanding
of process and task and application of
skills.
- Uploading and Sharing -
uploading materials to websites and the
sharing of materials via sites like flickr
etc. This is a simple form of collaboration,
a higher order thinking skill.
- Hacking – hacking
in its simpler forms is applying a simple
set of rules to achieve a goal or objective.
- Editing – With
most media, editing is a process or a
procedure that the editor employs.
Key
Terms - Applying:
Implementing, carrying out, using,
executing, running, loading, playing,
operating, hacking, uploading, sharing,
editing. |
Analysing
The digital additions and their explanations
are as follows:
- Mashing – mash
ups are the integration of several data
sources into a single resource. Mashing
data currently is a complex process but
as more options and sites evolve this
will become an increasingly easy and
accessible means of analysis.
- Linking – this
is establishing and building links within
and outside of documents and web pages.
- Reverse-engineering – this
is analogous with deconstruction. It
is also related to cracking often with
out the negative implications associated
with this.
- Cracking – cracking
requires the cracker to understand and
operate the application or system being
cracked, analyse its strengths and weaknesses
and then exploit these.
- Validating – With
the wealth of information available to
students combined with the lack of authentication
of data, students of today and tomorrow
must be able to validate the veracity
of their information sources. To do this
they must be able to analyse the data
sources and make judgements based on
these.
- Tagging – This
is organising, structuring and attributing
online data, meta-tagging web pages etc.
Students need to be able understand and
analyse the content of the pages to be
able to tag it.
Key
Terms - Analysing:
Comparing, organising, deconstructing,
Attributing, outlining, finding,
structuring, integrating, Mashing,
linking, reverse-engineering, cracking,
mind-mapping, validating, tagging. |
Evaluating
The digital additions and their explanations
are as follows:
- Blog/vlog commenting and reflecting – Constructive
criticism and reflective practice are
often facilitated by the use of blogs
and video blogs. Students commenting
and replying to postings have to evaluate
the material in context and reply.
- Posting – posting
comments to blogs, discussion boards,
threaded discussions. These are increasingly
common elements of students' daily practice.
Good postings like good comments, are
not simple one-line answers but rather
are structured and constructed to evaluate
the topic or concept.
- Moderating – This
is high level evaluation; the moderator
must be able to evaluate a posting or
comment from a variety of perspectives,
assessing its worth, value and appropriateness.
- Collaborating and networking – Collaboration
is an increasing feature of education.
In a world increasingly focused on communication,
collaboration leading to collective intelligence
is a key aspect. Effective collaboration
involves evaluating the strengths and
abilities of the participants and evaluating
the contribution they make. Networking
is a feature of collaboration, contacting
and communicating with relevant person
via a network of associates.
- Testing (Alpha
and Beta) – Testing of applications,
processes and procedures is a key element
in the development of any tool. To be
an effective tester you must have the
ability to analyze the purpose of the
tool or process, what its correct function
should be and what its current function
is.
Key
Terms – Evaluating:
Checking, hypothesising, critiquing,
experimenting, judging, testing,
detecting, monitoring, (Blog/vlog)
commenting, reviewing, posting, moderating,
collaborating, networking, reflecting,
(Alpha & beta) testing. |
Creating
The digital additions and their explanations
are as follows:
- Programming – Whether
it is creating their own applications,
programming macros or developing games
or multimedia applications within structured
environments, students are routinely
creating their own programs to suit their
needs and goals.
- Filming, animating, videocasting,
podcasting, mixing and remixing – these
relate to the increasing availability
of multimedia and multimedia editing
tools. Students frequently capture,
create, mix and remix content to produce
unique products.
- Directing and producing – to
directing or producing a product, performance
or production is a highly creative process.
It requires the student to have vision,
understand the components and meld these
into a coherent product.
- Publishing – whether
via the web or from home computers, publishing
in text, media or digital formats is
increasing. Again this requires a huge
overview of not only the content being
published, but the process and product.
Related to this concept are also Video
blogging – the production
of video blogs, blogging and
also wiki-ing - creating,
adding to and modify content in wikis.
Creating or building Mash ups would
also fit here.
Key
Terms – Creating:
designing, constructing, planning,
producing, inventing, devising, making,
programming, filming, animating,
Blogging, Video blogging, mixing,
remixing, wiki-ing, publishing, videocasting,
podcasting, directing/producing,
creating or building mash ups. |
Bibliography
Churches,
A. 2007, Educational Origami, Bloom's
and ICT Tools
Anderson, L.W., and D. Krathwohl (Eds.)
(2001). A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching
and Assessing: a Revision of Bloom's Taxonomy
of Educational Objectives. Longman, New
York.
Acknowledgements: For assistance, discussion
and often punctuation:Miguel Guhlin, Sheryl
Nussbaum-Beach, Alan Knightbridge, Sue
Cattell, Raewyn Casey, Marg McLeod, Doug
DeKock
Email: Andrew
Churches
.
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