Planning Your Questions Using Bloom
Planning Your Questions Using Bloom
Planning Your Questions Using Bloom
Taken from The Ultimate Teaching Manual Gererd Dixie published by Continuum - available at
all good book stores from 14th April
Research (Wragg and Brown, 2001) suggests that lessons where questioning is most effective are
likely to have a number of specific characteristics. These are as follows:
where questions have been planned, visually displayed and closely linked to the objectives of
the lesson;
where the learning of basic skills has been enhanced by frequent questioning following the
exposition of new content that has been broken down into bite-size pieces;
where each step has been followed by guided practice that provides opportunities for pupils to
consolidate what they have learnt and which allows teachers to check understanding;
where closed questions have been used to check factual understanding and recall;
where sequences of questions have been planned so that cognitive levels increase as the
questioning continues. This ensures that pupils have been encouraged to answer questions
that demand increasingly higher-order thinking skills;
where the classroom climate has been such that pupils have felt secure enough to take risks,
be tentative and make mistakes.
In 1956, having researched thousands of questions routinely asked by teachers, Benjamin Bloom set
about putting these into six categories. These categories came to be known as Blooms Taxonomy. In
the same year a committee of colleges led by Bloom carried out further work on this classification issue
and identified three domains of educational activities.
These are:
1 Cognitive: mental skills (Knowledge).
2 Psychomotor: manual or physical skills (Skills).
3 Affective: growth in feelings or emotional areas (Attitude).
The term domains in an educational sense simply means categories. Trainers often refer to these
three domains as KSA (Knowledge, Skills, and Attitude). This taxonomy of learning behaviours can be
thought of as the goals of the training process; in other words once the learning session has finished,
the learner should have acquired new skills,knowledge, and/or attitudes.
This compilation subdivides the three domains, starting from the simplest behaviour to the most
complex. The divisions outlined are not absolutes and there are other systems or hierarchies that have
been devised in the educational and training world. However, Blooms Taxonomy is easily understood
and is probably the most widely applied system today. For the purposes of this book, and without
wishing to demote the significance of the other two domains, I am asking you to focus your attention
primarily on the cognitive domain. Having said this, there is a real need for teachers to explore the other
two domains in their lessons wherever possible.
Cognitive domain
The cognitive domain, shown involves the development of knowledge and intellectual skills. This
includes the recall or recognition of specific facts, procedural patterns and concepts that serve in the
development of intellectual abilities and skills. There are six major categories, which are listed in order
below, starting from the simplest behaviour to the most complex. The categories have been arranged
as a hierarchy: in other words, the first one must be mastered before the next one can take place. So,
what exactly are the implications of Blooms Taxonomy for your teaching and learning? The
fundamental purpose of the taxonomy is to help you to plan a range of questions to support and
challenge pupils of all abilities in your lessons. The emphasis here is on the word plan. Your questions
should not be hit and miss but should be directed at those pupils to whom they are most appropriate;
in short, you need to differentiate your questioning. To help you to do this I have presented further
guidance below:
Make this taxonomy clear to your pupils. Explaining the principles and purpose of Blooms Taxonomy
to your pupils, and presenting this to them in visual form in your classroom, is one way to get the pupils
to understand why you will be asking different types of questions during your lessons. Bearing in mind
the importance of getting pupils to ask questions, you could always provide the class with a visual
stimulus (photograph, video clip, cartoon, print, etc) and ask your pupils to use Display a diagram
showing Blooms Taxonomy.
Blooms Taxonomy to come up with a series of questions they would like to ask. Doing this will most
certainly develop their questioning and thinking skills. When launching your learning objectives,
produce a series of key questions that cover the range of categories found in Blooms Taxonomy. You
can use these questions to explore the level of pupils understanding of the topic under study.
The other thing you could do is to introduce a competitive element into your lessons by giving your
questions a currency using Blooms Taxonomy as a general guide. Your Knowledge questions could be
worth one point, your Comprehension questions worth two points and so on. Pupils could amass
points according to the types of questions they answer.
Using Blooms Taxonomy you could produce a series of colour-coded questions (each category being
given a different colour) on one aspect of a unit of work you are teaching. You could ask your lowerability pupils to choose one question from the first three categories (Knowledge, omprehension,
Application) and if they can manage it, one from another category. You could then get your more able
pupils to select one or two questions from the more challenging categories. Doing this will involve pupils
of all ability in the learning.
Blooms Taxonomy
Knowledgeseful Verbs Sample Question Stems Potential activities and
USEFUL VERBS
Tell
List
Describe
Relate
Locate
Write
Find
State
SAMPLE QUESTION STEMS
Name
What happened after...?
How many...?
Who was it that...?
Can you name the...?
Describe what happened at...?
Who spoke to...?
Can you tell why...?
Find the meaning of...?
What is...?
Which is true or false...?
POTENTIAL ACTIVITIES OR PRODUCTS
Make a list of the main events..
Make a timeline of events.
Make a facts chart.
Write a list of any pieces of information you can remember.
List all the .... in the story.
Make a chart showing...
Make an acrostic.
Recite a poem.
Comprehension
Useful Verbs Sample Question Stems Potential activities and
USEFUL VERBS
Explain
Interpret
Outline
Discuss
Distinguish
Predict
Restate
Translate
Compare
Describe