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Taxonomy

Bloom's Revised Taxonomy consists of six levels of cognitive learning: remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating. Each level has specific definitions and appropriate verbs for developing learning outcomes. The taxonomy serves as a framework for assessing student learning and ensuring that educational objectives are met.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views2 pages

Taxonomy

Bloom's Revised Taxonomy consists of six levels of cognitive learning: remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating. Each level has specific definitions and appropriate verbs for developing learning outcomes. The taxonomy serves as a framework for assessing student learning and ensuring that educational objectives are met.

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12/2/24, 1:30 PM Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy - Colorado College

Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy


There are six levels of cognitive learning according to the revised version of Bloom's Taxonomy. Each level is conceptually different.
The six levels are remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating.

Using Bloom's Revised Taxonomy in Assessment


These levels can be helpful in developing learning outcomes because certain verbs are particularly appropriate at each level and not appropriate
at other levels (though some verbs are useful at multiple levels). A student might list presidents or proteins or participles to demonstrate that
they remember something they learned, but generating a list does not demonstrate (for example) that the student is capable of evaluating the
contribution of multiple presidents to American politics or explaining protein folding or distinguishing between active and passive participles.

Remember
Definition: retrieve, recall, or recognize relevant knowledge from long-term memory (e.g., recall dates of important events in U.S. history,
remember the components of a bacterial cell). Appropriate learning outcome verbs for this level include: cite, define, describe, identify, label,
list, match, name, outline, quote, recall, report, reproduce, retrieve, show, state, tabulate, and tell.

Understand
Definition: demonstrate comprehension through one or more forms of explanation (e.g., classify a mental illness, compare ritual practices in
two different religions). Appropriate learning outcome verbs for this level include: abstract, arrange, articulate, associate, categorize, clarify,
classify, compare, compute, conclude, contrast, defend, diagram, differentiate, discuss, distinguish, estimate, exemplify, explain, extend,
extrapolate, generalize, give examples of, illustrate, infer, interpolate, interpret, match, outline, paraphrase, predict, rearrange, reorder,
rephrase, represent, restate, summarize, transform, and translate.

Apply
Definition: use information or a skill in a new situation (e.g., use Newton's second law to solve a problem for which it is appropriate, carry out a
multivariate statistical analysis using a data set not previously encountered). Appropriate learning outcome verbs for this level include: apply,
calculate, carry out, classify, complete, compute, demonstrate, dramatize, employ, examine, execute, experiment, generalize, illustrate,
implement, infer, interpret, manipulate, modify, operate, organize, outline, predict, solve, transfer, translate, and use.
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12/2/24, 1:30 PM Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy - Colorado College

Analyze
Definition: break material into its constituent parts and determine how the parts relate to one another and/or to an overall structure or purpose
(e.g., analyze the relationship between different flora and fauna in an ecological setting; analyze the relationship between different characters in
a play; analyze the relationship between different institutions in a society). Appropriate learning outcome verbs for this level
include: analyze, arrange, break down, categorize, classify, compare, connect, contrast, deconstruct, detect, diagram, differentiate,
discriminate, distinguish, divide, explain, identify, integrate, inventory, order, organize, relate, separate, and structure.

Evaluate
Definition: make judgments based on criteria and standards (e.g., detect inconsistencies or fallacies within a process or product, determine
whether a scientist's conclusions follow from observed data, judge which of two methods is the way to solve a given problem, determine the
quality of a product based on disciplinary criteria). Appropriate learning outcome verbs for this level include: appraise, apprise, argue, assess,
compare, conclude, consider, contrast, convince, criticize, critique, decide, determine, discriminate, evaluate, grade, judge, justify, measure,
rank, rate, recommend, review, score, select, standardize, support, test, and validate.

Create
Definitions: put elements together to form a new coherent or functional whole; reorganize elements into a new pattern or structure (design a
new set for a theater production, write a thesis, develop an alternative hypothesis based on criteria, invent a product, compose a piece of music,
write a play). Appropriate learning outcome verbs for this level include: arrange, assemble, build, collect, combine, compile, compose,
constitute, construct, create, design, develop, devise, formulate, generate, hypothesize, integrate, invent, make, manage, modify, organize,
perform, plan, prepare, produce, propose, rearrange, reconstruct, reorganize, revise, rewrite, specify, synthesize, and write.

Source: Anderson, Lorin W., and David R. Krathwohl, eds. 2001. A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom's
Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. New York: Addison Wesley Longman, Inc.

https://www.coloradocollege.edu/other/assessment/how-to-assess-learning/learning-outcomes/blooms-revised-taxonomy.html 2/2

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