5
Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy

Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy. Lower order thinkingHigher order thinking

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy. Lower order thinkingHigher order thinking

Lesson Planning With Bloom’s

Taxonomy

Page 2: Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy. Lower order thinkingHigher order thinking

Lower order thinking

Higher order thinking

Page 3: Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy. Lower order thinkingHigher order thinking

definelist

memorize

recallrepeat

reproduce

state

classifydescribediscussexplainidentifyreport

paraphrase

choosedemonstrat

eillustrateinterpretoperate

usesolvewrite

comparecontrastcriticizeexamine

differentiate

test

arguedefendjudgeselect

supportvalue

evaluate

assemble

construct

createdesign

developformula

tewrite

Page 4: Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy. Lower order thinkingHigher order thinking

Class Practice 1

Sample from “The U.S.A. Customs and Institutions” by Ethel Tiersky and Martin Tiersky (Longman 2001).

Work in groups to fill out the lesson planning sheet for this particular lesson.

We will share them as a class.

Page 5: Lesson Planning With Bloom’s Taxonomy. Lower order thinkingHigher order thinking

Personal Lesson Planning

Take a chapter, concept, or already made lesson of your own and see if you can create a lesson plan (or “beef up” your existing one) using Bloom’s Taxonomy.

Please ask for questions/advice.

Feel free to make more than one lesson plan if you have time—remember, this is something you can take back with you and use!

Afterwards, we will share our lessons in our groups.