Series 1: Study the Art of Learning - Sxcjcomputerscience

St Xavier's College, Jaipur

(Affiliated to The University of Rajasthan)
(Approved under Section 2(f) and 12(B) of UGC Act, 1956)
A Christian Minority Educational Institution under Section 2(g) of NCMEI Act, 2004
Mahapura Road, Nevta, Rajasthan-302029

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Series 1: Study the Art of Learning

“Bloom’s Taxonomy: Finest techniques of Educational Learning”


sxcjcomputerscience

 

Dear students

The study strategies used in high school demands more higher order thinking in college. The learning levels of thinking needs to expand from remembering level to application, analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and creation. We need to push our brains towards the higher levels of thinking the outer world has in mind. These higher levels of thinking enhance our brain capacity to deeply learn information in this digitalized world. Integration of higher-level thinking into your study habits increases your intellectual learning skills.

Bloom’s Taxonomy was one of the classification structures to classify academic skills and performance important to learn in education. [Overbaugh, R. & Schultz, L, 2014] It was primarily published in 1956 under the headship of American academic and educational specialist Dr. Benjamin S. Bloom.

Bloom chaired a Committee of Educational Psychologists to build up an arrangement of categories of learning behaviour to aid the design and assessment of educational learning [Heather Coffey, “Bloom's Taxonomy”,].

The unique Taxonomy provided cautiously developed definitions for each of the six major categories in the intellectual domain. The categories were Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, Analysis, Synthesis, and Evaluation.

With the exception of Application, each of these was broken into subcategories. The complete structure of the original Taxonomy His taxonomy was formerly created for an academic perspective. It has three major parts [Bloom, B. S. (1956).]:

  • Cognitive Domain (intellectual capability i.e. ‘think’): The cognitive domain covered “the recall or recognition of knowledge/pattern/setting and the growth of academic abilities and skills” [Ausubel D P (1968)].
  • Affective Domain (Attitude or feel): The affective domain covered “changes in morals, temperament, and, curiosity and the progress of appreciations and sufficient adjustment”.
  • Psychomotor Domain (manual or physical skills): The psychomotor domain encompassed “the manipulative area” [Dave, R.H. (1970).] [Harrow, A. (1972) ] [Simpson E.J. (1972).].

The original Bloom’s Taxonomy includes six progressive categories as follows [Bloom, B. S. (1956)]:

  • Knowledge: Students recall, memorize, list, and repeat information. 
  • Comprehension: Students classify, illustrate, discuss, identify, and describe information.
  • Application: Students demonstrate, interpret, and write about what they’ve learned and solve problems. 
  • Analysis: Students compare, contrast, distinguish, and examine what they’ve grasped with other information, and they have the chance to question and test this learning.
  • Synthesis: Students argue, defend, support.
  • Evaluation: They evaluate their opinion on the information. 


Ms Vaishali Singh
Asst. Prof. (Head) Department of Computer Science
Web of Science ResearcherID : AAC-9573-2020





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