Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (Original, 1956)
Skill            Definition                                Key Words
Knowledge        Recall information                        Identify, describe, name, label,
                                                           recognize, reproduce, follow
Comprehension Understand the meaning, paraphrase a         Summarize, convert, defend,
              concept                                      paraphrase, interpret, give examples
Application      Use the information or concept in a       Build, make, construct, model, predict,
                 new situation                             prepare
Analysis         Break information or concepts into        Compare/contrast, break down,
                 parts to understand it more fully         distinguish, select, separate
Synthesis        Put ideas together to form something      Categorize, generalize, reconstruct
                 new
Evaluation       Make judgments about value                Appraise, critique, judge, justify,
                                                           argue, support
Unlike the 1956 version, the revised taxonomy differentiates between “knowing what,” the
content of thinking, and “knowing how,” the procedures used in solving problems.
The Knowledge Dimension is the “knowing what.” It has four categories: factual, conceptual,
procedural,and metacognitive. Factual knowledge includes isolated bits of information, such as
vocabulary definitions and knowledge about specific details. Conceptual knowledge consists of
systems of information, such as classifications and categories.
Procedural knowledge includes algorithms, heuristics or rules of thumb, techniques, and methods
as well as knowledge about when to use these procedures. Metacognitive knowledge refers to
knowledge of thinking processes and information about how to manipulate these processes
effectively.
Remembering
Remembering consists of recognizing and recalling relevant information from long-term
memory.
Understanding
Understanding is the ability to make your own meaning from educational material such as
reading and teacher explanations. The subskills for this process include interpreting,
exemplifying, classifying, summarizing, inferring, comparing, and explaining.
Applying
The third process, applying, refers to using a learned procedure either in a familiar or new
situation.
Analysis
The next process is analysis, which consists of breaking knowledge down into its parts and
thinking about how the parts relate to its overall structure. Students analyze by differentiating,
organizing, and attributing.
Evaluation
Evaluation, which is at the top of the original taxonomy, is the fifth of the six processes in the
revised version. It includes checking and critiquing.
Creating
Creating, a process not included in the earlier taxonomy, is the highest component of the new
version. This skill involves putting things together to make something new. To accomplish
creating tasks, learners generate, plan, and produce.
Cognitive Processes           Examples
Remembering—Produce the right information from memory
Recognizing                          Identify frogs in a diagram of different kinds of
                                      amphibians.
                                     Find an isosceles triangle in your neighbourhood.
                                     Answer any true-false or multiple-choice questions.
Recalling                            Name three 20th century women African authors.
                                     Write the multiplication facts.
                                     Reproduce the chemical formula for carbon tetrachloride.
Understanding—Make meaning from educational materials or experiences
Interpreting                         Translate a story problem into an algebraic equation.
                                     Draw a diagram of the digestive system.
                                     Paraphrase Mandela's Inaugural Address.
Exemplifying                         Draw a parallelogram.
                                     Find an example of stream-of-consciousness style of
                                      writing.
                                     Name a mammal that lives in our area.
Classifying                          Label numbers odd or even.
                                     List the kinds of governments found in modern African
                                      nations.
                                     Group animals into their proper species.
Summarizing                          Make up a title for a short passage.
                                     List the key points related to capital punishment that the
                                      website promotes.
Inferring                            Read a passage of dialogue between two characters and
                                      make conclusions about their past relationship.
                                     Figure out the meaning of an unfamiliar term from the
                                  context.
                                 Look at a series of numbers and predict what the next
                                  number will be.
Comparing                        Explain how the heart is like a pump.
                                 Write about an experience you have had that was like South
                                  Africans being relocated.
                                 Use a Venn diagram to demonstrate how two books by
                                  Charles Dickens are similar and different.
Explaining                       Draw a diagram explaining how air pressure affects the
                                  weather.
                                 Provide details that justify why the French Revolution
                                  happened, when and how it did.
                                 Describe how interest rates affect the economy.
Applying—Use a procedure
Executing                        Add a column of two-digit numbers.
                                 Orally read a passage in a foreign language.
                                 Kick a soccer ball.
Implementing                     Design an experiment to see how plants grow in different
                                  kinds of soil.
                                 Proofread a piece of writing.
                                 Create a budget.
Analyzing—Break a concept down into its parts and describe how the parts relate to the
whole
Differentiating                  List the important information in a mathematical word
                                  problem and cross out the unimportant information.
                                 Draw a diagram showing the major and minor characters in
                                  a novel.
Organizing                       Place the music in your i-Pod into categories.
                                 Make a chart of often-used figurative devices and explain
                                  their effect.
                                 Make a diagram showing the ways plants and animals in
                                  your neighborhood interact with each other.
Attributing                      Read letters to the editor to determine the authors’ points of
                                  view about a local issue.
                                 Determine a character’s motivation in a novel or short
                                  story.
                                 Look at brochures of political candidates and hypothesize
                                  about their perspectives on issues.
Evaluating—Make judgments based on criteria and standards
Checking                           Participate in a writing group, giving peers feedback on
                                    organization and logic of arguments.
                                   Listen to a political speech and make a list of any
                                    contradictions within the speech (but dont tell the politician
                                    ;-)).
                                   Review a project plan to see if all the necessary steps are
                                    included.
Critiquing                          Judge how well a project meets the criteria of a rubric.
                                   Choose the best method for solving a complex
                                    mathematical problem.
                                   Judge the validity of arguments for and against astrology.
Creating—Put pieces together to form something new or recognize components of a new
structure.
Generating                         Given a list of criteria, list some options for improving race
                                    relations in the school.
                                   Generate several scientific hypotheses to explain why
                                    plants need sunshine.
                                   Propose a set of alternatives for reducing dependence on
                                    fossil fuels that address both economic and environmental
                                    concerns.
                                   Come up with alternative hypotheses based on criteria.
Planning                           Make a storyboard for a multimedia presentation on insects.
                                   Outline a research paper on Alan Paton's views on religion.
                                   Design a scientific study to test the effect of different kinds
                                    of music on hens’ egg production.
Producing                          Write a journal from the point of view of an exiled South
                                    African in the 1970's.
                                   Build a habitat for local water fowl.
                                   Put on a play based on a chapter from a novel you’re
                                    reading.
Pada tanggal Jum, 28 Sep 2018 pukul 15.00 Eny Supriyati Rosyidatun
<eny.rosyidatun@uinjkt.ac.id> menulis:
Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (Original, 1956)
Skill          Definition                                 Key Words
Knowledge      Recall information                         Identify, describe, name, label,
                                                          recognize, reproduce, follow
Comprehension Understand the meaning, paraphrase a        Summarize, convert, defend,
              concept                                     paraphrase, interpret, give examples
Application       Use the information or concept in a       Build, make, construct, model, predict,
                  new situation                             prepare
Analysis          Break information or concepts into        Compare/contrast, break down,
                  parts to understand it more fully         distinguish, select, separate
Synthesis         Put ideas together to form something      Categorize, generalize, reconstruct
                  new
Evaluation        Make judgments about value                Appraise, critique, judge, justify,
                                                            argue, support
Unlike the 1956 version, the revised taxonomy differentiates between “knowing what,” the
content of thinking, and “knowing how,” the procedures used in solving problems.
The Knowledge Dimension is the “knowing what.” It has four categories: factual, conceptual,
procedural, and metacognitive. Factual knowledge includes isolated bits of information, such as
vocabulary definitions and knowledge about specific details. Conceptual knowledge consists of
systems of information, such as classifications and categories.
Procedural knowledge includes algorithms, heuristics or rules of thumb, techniques, and methods
as well as knowledge about when to use these procedures. Metacognitive knowledge refers to
knowledge of thinking processes and information about how to manipulate these processes
effectively.
Remembering
Remembering consists of recognizing and recalling relevant information from long-term
memory.
Understanding
Understanding is the ability to make your own meaning from educational material such as
reading and teacher explanations. The subskills for this process include interpreting,
exemplifying, classifying, summarizing, inferring, comparing, and explaining.
Applying
The third process, applying, refers to using a learned procedure either in a familiar or new
situation.
Analysis
The next process is analysis, which consists of breaking knowledge down into its parts and
thinking about how the parts relate to its overall structure. Students analyze by differentiating,
organizing, and attributing.
Evaluation
Evaluation, which is at the top of the original taxonomy, is the fifth of the six processes in the
revised version. It includes checking and critiquing.
Creating
Creating, a process not included in the earlier taxonomy, is the highest component of the new
version. This skill involves putting things together to make something new. To accomplish
creating tasks, learners generate, plan, and produce.
Cognitive Processes          Examples
Remembering—Produce the right information from memory
Recognizing                         Identify frogs in a diagram of different kinds of
                                     amphibians.
                                    Find an isosceles triangle in your neighbourhood.
                                    Answer any true-false or multiple-choice questions.
Recalling                           Name three 20th century women African authors.
                                    Write the multiplication facts.
                                    Reproduce the chemical formula for carbon tetrachloride.
Understanding—Make meaning from educational materials or experiences
Interpreting                        Translate a story problem into an algebraic equation.
                                    Draw a diagram of the digestive system.
                                    Paraphrase Mandela's Inaugural Address.
Exemplifying                        Draw a parallelogram.
                                    Find an example of stream-of-consciousness style of
                                     writing.
                                    Name a mammal that lives in our area.
Classifying                         Label numbers odd or even.
                                    List the kinds of governments found in modern African
                                     nations.
                                    Group animals into their proper species.
Summarizing                         Make up a title for a short passage.
                                    List the key points related to capital punishment that the
                                     website promotes.
Inferring                           Read a passage of dialogue between two characters and
                                     make conclusions about their past relationship.
                                    Figure out the meaning of an unfamiliar term from the
                                     context.
                                    Look at a series of numbers and predict what the next
                                     number will be.
Comparing                           Explain how the heart is like a pump.
                                    Write about an experience you have had that was like South
                                     Africans being relocated.
                                    Use a Venn diagram to demonstrate how two books by
                                  Charles Dickens are similar and different.
Explaining                       Draw a diagram explaining how air pressure affects the
                                  weather.
                                 Provide details that justify why the French Revolution
                                  happened, when and how it did.
                                 Describe how interest rates affect the economy.
Applying—Use a procedure
Executing                        Add a column of two-digit numbers.
                                 Orally read a passage in a foreign language.
                                 Kick a soccer ball.
Implementing                     Design an experiment to see how plants grow in different
                                  kinds of soil.
                                 Proofread a piece of writing.
                                 Create a budget.
Analyzing—Break a concept down into its parts and describe how the parts relate to the
whole
Differentiating                  List the important information in a mathematical word
                                  problem and cross out the unimportant information.
                                 Draw a diagram showing the major and minor characters in
                                  a novel.
Organizing                       Place the music in your i-Pod into categories.
                                 Make a chart of often-used figurative devices and explain
                                  their effect.
                                 Make a diagram showing the ways plants and animals in
                                  your neighborhood interact with each other.
Attributing                      Read letters to the editor to determine the authors’ points of
                                  view about a local issue.
                                 Determine a character’s motivation in a novel or short
                                  story.
                                 Look at brochures of political candidates and hypothesize
                                  about their perspectives on issues.
Evaluating—Make judgments based on criteria and standards
Checking                         Participate in a writing group, giving peers feedback on
                                  organization and logic of arguments.
                                 Listen to a political speech and make a list of any
                                  contradictions within the speech (but dont tell the politician
                                  ;-)).
                                 Review a project plan to see if all the necessary steps are
                                  included.
Critiquing                       Judge how well a project meets the criteria of a rubric.
                                Choose the best method for solving a complex
                                 mathematical problem.
                                Judge the validity of arguments for and against astrology.
Creating—Put pieces together to form something new or recognize components of a new
structure.
Generating                      Given a list of criteria, list some options for improving race
                                 relations in the school.
                                Generate several scientific hypotheses to explain why
                                 plants need sunshine.
                                Propose a set of alternatives for reducing dependence on
                                 fossil fuels that address both economic and environmental
                                 concerns.
                                Come up with alternative hypotheses based on criteria.
Planning                        Make a storyboard for a multimedia presentation on insects.
                                Outline a research paper on Alan Paton's views on religion.
                                Design a scientific study to test the effect of different kinds
                                 of music on hens’ egg production.
Producing                       Write a journal from the point of view of an exiled South
                                 African in the 1970's.
                                Build a habitat for local water fowl.
                                Put on a play based on a chapter from a novel you’re
                                 reading.
Pada tanggal Jum, 28 Sep 2018 pukul 11.55 Eny Supriyati Rosyidatun
<eny.rosyidatun@uinjkt.ac.id> menulis:
2018-09-28 11:52 GMT+07.00, Eny Supriyati Rosyidatun
<eny.rosyidatun@uinjkt.ac.id>:
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