Bloom's Taxonomy
Bloom's Taxonomy of the Cognitive Domain
Benjamin Bloom’s 1956 taxonomy classifies levels of thinking in the cognitive domain. Almost seventy years later, it still shapes how teachers write objectives, design assessments, and check whether students are thinking deeply enough. A complete teacher develops students across all six levels over time, moving past recall into application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.
Bloom’s six levels and why they matter for lesson planning
Levels 1 and 2: recall and explanation in the student’s own words
Level 3: applying learned knowledge to a new situation, and why this makes Math feel hard
Levels 4 and 5: taking ideas apart and putting them back together in new forms
Level 6: judging with criteria, generating arguments, and the highest order of thinking
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