Bloom

Six Levels of Thinking

Orig­i­nal­ly devel­oped in the 1950’s, Bloom’s Tax­on­o­my of Learn­ing has sub­se­quent­ly been updat­ed and used in all sec­tors of edu­ca­tion. It is a hier­ar­chy of learn­ing based on the cog­ni­tive, phys­i­cal and emo­tion­al domains of learn­ing, orga­nized across six main cat­e­gories, start­ing with low­er order think­ing and mov­ing upward to high­er order think­ing skills.

The six major cat­e­gories start­ing with low­er order think­ing

  1. Remem­ber
  2. Under­stand
  3. Apply
  4. Ana­lyze
  5. Eval­u­ate
  6. Cre­ate
  • Helps both stu­dents and teach­ers iden­ti­fy what they’re aim­ing for in the learn­ing / teach­ing process.
  • Pro­vides clear and con­cise lan­guage for explain­ing learn­ing out­comes.
  • Helps us iden­ti­fy the range of think­ing process­es across cog­ni­tive domains to ensure we pro­vide  com­pre­hen­sive learn­ing expe­ri­ences.
  • May lead to learn­ing out­comes that over­ly focus on high­er order think­ing, dis­re­gard­ing how the low­er and high­er order lev­els inter­sect (e.g., you need to remember/learn some con­cepts before you can eval­u­ate and cre­ate).
  • Does not include the spir­i­tu­al aspect of learn­ing (see LaFever sec­tion).
  • Over­ly focus­ing on how to artic­u­late learn­ing out­comes using Bloom’s list of verbs miss­es the cru­cial point of align­ing learn­ing out­comes with course activ­i­ties.
  • A Guide to Learn­ing Out­comes at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Alber­ta: [PDF]
  • List of Action Verbs based on Bloom’s Tax­on­o­my of Learn­ing: [PDF]
  • Cat­e­gories of Learn­ing: [PDF]
  • Uni­ver­si­ty of Water­loo — Bloom’s Tax­on­o­my [Web Page] pro­vides a use­ful start­ing point in iden­ti­fy­ing how to apply Bloom to writ­ing learn­ing out­comes
  • Van­der­bilt Uni­ver­si­ty Cen­ter for Teach­ing and Learn­ing — Bloom’s Tax­on­o­my [Web Page] offers a brief overview of the his­to­ry of Bloom and a basic intro­duc­tion on how to apply it