Asking students to think at higher levels, beyond simple
recall, is an excellent way to stimulate students' thought processes. Different types of questions require us to use different kinds or levels of thinking.
See a list of verbs for use in lesson plans and discussion questions that correlates to Bloom's levels of thinking.
According to Bloom’s Taxonomy, human thinking skills can be broken down into the following six categories.
Knowledge: remembering or
recalling appropriate, previously learned information to draw out factual
(usually right or wrong) answers. Use words and phrases such as: how many,
when, where,
list, define, tell, describe, identify, etc., to draw out
factual answers, testing students' recall and recognition.
Comprehension: grasping
or understanding the meaning of informational materials. Use words such as:
describe, explain, estimate, predict, identify, differentiate, etc., to encourage students to translate, interpret, and extrapolate.
Application: applying previously learned information (or knowledge) to new
and unfamiliar situations. Use words such as: demonstrate, apply, illustrate, show,
solve, examine, classify, experiment, etc.,
to encourage students to apply knowledge to situations that are new
and unfamiliar.
Analysis: breaking down
information into parts, or examining (and trying to understand the
organizational structure of) information. Use words and phrases such as: what are
the differences, analyze, explain, compare, separate, classify, arrange, etc.,
to encourage students to break information down into parts.
Synthesis: applying
prior knowledge and skills to combine elements into a pattern not clearly
there before. Use words and phrases such as: combine, rearrange, substitute,
create, design, invent, what if, etc., to encourage students to combine elements
into a pattern that's new.
Evaluation: judging or
deciding according to some set of criteria, without real right or wrong
answers. Use words such as: assess, decide, measure, select, explain,
conclude, compare, summarize, etc., to encourage students to make
judgements according to a set of criteria.