Assignment - Infographics - 100
These instructions serve as general guidelines. Adapt them as needed to suit the specific requirements of the task or creative vision. Avoid following them rigidly without considering the context.
Objective
Create a pyramid infographic in Canva that presents Bloom’s Taxonomy - the six levels of cognitive learning that teachers use to design learning objectives, activities, and assessments.
Instructions
The Six Levels
Build a pyramid with six horizontal sections. The widest section is at the bottom (the most basic level) and the narrowest is at the top (the most demanding). From bottom to top:
- Remember - Recall facts and basic information. Verbs: define, list, name, recall, identify.
- Understand - Explain ideas or concepts in your own words. Verbs: describe, explain, summarize, classify, paraphrase.
- Apply - Use knowledge in a new situation. Verbs: use, solve, demonstrate, calculate, carry out.
- Analyze - Break information into parts and examine relationships. Verbs: compare, contrast, distinguish, examine, break down.
- Evaluate - Make judgements based on criteria. Verbs: judge, justify, argue, assess, critique.
- Create - Produce something new by combining knowledge. Verbs: design, build, compose, plan, produce.
For Each Level Include
- Level name
- A short definition (one sentence)
- Three action verbs
- One example of a classroom task at that level (e.g., for Apply: “Students solve three word problems using the formula they learned”)
Design in Canva
- Search for a pyramid or triangle template in Canva.
- Assign a distinct color to each level - move from cool colors at the base to warm colors at the top (e.g., blue at the bottom, red at the top).
- Put the level name and definition inside each section.
- List the action verbs in a small side panel next to each level.
- Keep font sizes consistent throughout.
Required Elements
- All six levels, bottom to top, correctly ordered.
- Level name, definition, verbs, and classroom example for each.
- Color-coded pyramid.
- Title: “Bloom’s Taxonomy.”
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