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TAXONOMY

OF
EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES

The Classification of Educational Goals


TAXONOMY
OF
EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES

The C.lassiiication of Educational Goals

HANDBOOK 1 COGNITIVE DOMAIN


By

A Committee of College
and University Examiners

Benjamin S. Bloom. Editor


University Examiner
University of Chicago

Max D. Engelhart
Director. Department of Examinations
Chicago City Junior Colleges

Edward J. Furst
Chief, Evaluation and Examination Division
University of Michigan

Walker H. Hill
Examiner. Board of Examiners
Michigan State University

David R. Krathwohl
Coordinator of Research
Bureau of Research and Service
Michigan State University

LONGMANS
1. o N 1; M A N S, G R E E N A N D CO L T D
1K Grosvenor Street, London Wl
.-h·,,;,u iaJ.,~,J com,Panies, branches ar,.d representatives
throughout the wor/d

TAXONOMY OF
EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES

CoPYRIGHT 1956

BY DAVID McKAY COMPANY, INC.

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE


THIS BOOK, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, IN ANY FORM

PUBLISHED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA

Printed in the United States of America


EDWARDS BROS •., ANN AR.BOR„ MICHIGAN
To Ralph W. Tyler,
whose ideas on evaluation have been
a constant source of Stimulation to
his colleagues in examining, and whose
energy and patience have never failed us .
List of participants who contributed
to the development of the taxonomy
through attending one or more of the
conferences held from 1949 to 1953

Anderson, Gordon V, Gage, N. L.


University of Texas University of lllinois

Bloom, Benjamin S. Harris, Chester W.


University of Chicago University of Wisconsin

Churchill, Ruth Hastings, J. Thomas


Antioch College University of lllinois

Cronbach, L. J. Heil, Louis M.


University of Illinois Brooklyn College

Dahnke, Harold L,, Jr. Hill, Walker H.


Michigan State University Michigan State University

Detchen, Lily Horton, Clark W.


Pennsylvania College Dartmouth College
for Women
Krathwohl, David R.
Dressel, Paul L. Michigan State University
Michigan State University
Loree, M, Ray
Dyer, Henry S. Louisiana State University
Educational Testing Service
Mayhew, Louis B.
Ebel, Robert L. Michigan State University
University of Iowa
McGuire, Christine
Engelhart, Max University of Chicago
Chicago Public Schools
McQuitty, John V.
Findley, Warren University of Florida
l~ducational Testing Service
Morris, John B.
l•'urst, Edward J. University of Mississippi
IJniversity of Michigan
Plumlee, Lynnette
Educational Testing Service

Pace, C. Robert
Syracuse University

Remmers, H. H.
Purdue University

Stern, George G,
Syracuse University

Sutton, Robert B.
Ohio State University

Thiede, Wilson
University of Wisconsin

Travers, Robert M.
Human Resources Research Center
San Antonio, Texas

Tyler, Ralph W.
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
Stanford, California

Warrington, Willard G.
Michigan State University

*Watt, Rex
University of Southern California

*Deceased
CONTENTS

PART I
Introduction and Explanation

Foreword 1
History 4
Problems 5
Organizational principles 6
Three domains-cognitive, affective, and
psychomotor 7
Development of the cognitive domain 8

Chapter 1 : The Nature and Development of the


Taxonomy 10
The taxonomy as a c lassification device 10
What is to be classified 11
Guiding principles 13
Developing the taxonomy 15
The problem of a hierarchy-classification
versus taxonomy 17
Is the taxonomy a useful tool? 20

Chapter 2: Educational Objectives and Curriculum


Development 25
Knowledge as a taxonomy category 28
What is knowable 31
Justification for the development of knowledge 32
Curricular decisions to· be made about knowl-
edge objectives 36
The nature of abilities and skills 38
Arts or skills + knowledge = abilities 38
Justification for the development of intellectual
abilities and skills 39

Chapter 3 : The Problems of Classifying Educational


Objectives and Test Exercises 44
Three levels of definition in each taxonomy
category 44
The classification of objectives 45
Test yourself on the classification of objectives 50
The problems of classifying test exercises 51
Test yourself on the classification of test exer-
cises 54
Key to the classification of educational objectives 59
PART II
The Taxonomy and Illustrative Materials

1. 00 Knowledge 62
1. 10 Knowledge of specifics 63
1. 20 Knowledge of ways and means of dealing
with specifics 68
1. 30 Knowledge of the universals and abstrac-
tions in a field 75
Testing for Knowledge, and illustrative test items 78
1.10 Knowledge of specifics 79
1. 20 Knowledge of ways and means of dealing
with specifics 81
1. 30 Knowledge of the universals and abstrac-
tions in a field 86

2. 00 Comprehension 89
2. 10 Translation 91
2. 20 Interpretation 93
2. 30 Extrapolation 95
Testing for Comprehension, and illustrative test
items 97
2.10 Translation 99
2. 20 Interpretation 109
2. 30 Extrapolation 118

3. 00 Application 120
The educational implications of objectives in
the application category 122
Testing for Application, and illustrative test items 125

4. 00 Analysis 144
4. 10 Analysis of elements 145
4. 20 Analysis of relationships 146
4. 30 Analysis of organizational principles 147
Testing for Analysis, and illustrative test items 149
4.10 Analysis of elements 151
4. 20 Analysis of relationships 155
4. 30 Analysis of organizational principles 161
5. 00 Synthesis 162
Educational significance of Synthesis objectives 166
5.10 Production of a unique communication 168
5. 20 Production of a plan, or proposed set of
Operations 170
5. 30 Derivation of a set of abstract relations 171

Testing for Synthesis, and illustrative test items 173


5. 10 Production of a unique communication 1.77
5. 20 Production of a plan, or proposed set of
operations 180
5. 30 Derivation of a set of abstract relations 183

6. 00 Evaluation 185
6.10 Judgments in terms of internal evidence 188
6. 20 Judgments in terms of external criteria 190
Testing for Evaluation, and illustrative test items 193
6.10 Judgments in terms of internal evidence 196
6. 20 Judgments in terms of external criteria 197

Appendix
A condensed version of the Taxonomy of Educa-
tional Objectives 201
PART I

INTRODUCTION

AND

EXPLANATION
FOREWORD

Taxonomy--"Classüication, esp. of animals and


plants according to their natural relationships ... 111

Most readers will have heard of the biological taxono-


mies which permit classification into such categories as
phyllum, class, order, family, genus, species, variety.
Biologists have found their taxonomy markedly helpful as a
means of insuring accuracy of communication about their
science and as a means of understanding the organization
and interre lation of the various parts of the animal and plant
world. You are reading about an attempt to build a tax-
onomy of educational objectives. lt is intended to provide
for classification of the goals of our educational system.
lt is expected to be of general help to all teachers, admini-
strators, professional specialists, and research workers
who deal with curricular and evaluation problems. lt is
especially intended to help them discuss these problems
with greater precision. For example, some teachers be-
lieve their students should "really understand," others de-
sire their students to 11 internalize knowledge, 11 still others
want their students to 11 grasp the core or essence 11 or 11 com-
prehend. 11 Do they all mean the same thing? Specifica.lly,
what does a student do who "really understands" which he
does not do when he does not understand? Through refer-
ence to the taxonomy as a set of standard classifications,
teachers should be able to define such nebulous terms as
those given above. This should facilitate the exchange of
informationabout their curricular developments and evalu-
ation devices. Such interchanges are frequently disappoint-
ing now because all too frequently what appears to be com -
mon ground between schools disappears on closer exami-
nation of the descriptive terms being used.

But beyond this, the taxonomy should be a source of


constructive help on these problems. Teachers building a

1 Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield,


Mass.: G. & C. Merriam Co., 1953, p. 871.

1
2

curriculum shouldfind here a range ofpossible educational


goals or outcomes in the cognitive area ("cognitive" is used
to include activities such as remembering and recalling
knowledge, thinking, problem solving, creating). Compar-
ing the goals of their present curriculum with the range of
possible outcomes may suggest additiona_l goals they may
wish to include. As a further aid, sample objectives cho-
sen from a range of subject-matter fields (though mostly
from the upper educational levels) are used to illustrate
e<t<:h of the taxonomy rategories. These may he suggestive
of the kinds of objectives that could be included in their
own curriculum.

Use of the taxonomy can also help one gain a perspec-


tive on the emphasis given to certain behaviors by a par-
ticular set of educational plans. Thus, a teacher, in clas-
sifying the goals of a teaching unit, may find that they all
fall within the taxonomy category of recalling or remember-
ing knowledge. Looking at the taxonomy categories may sug-
gest to him that, for example, he could include some goals
dealing with the application of this knowledge and with the
analysis of the situations in which the knowledge is used.

Curriculum builders should find the · taxonomy helps


them to specify objectives so that it becomes easier to plan
learning experiences and prepare evaluation devices. To
return to the illustration of the use of the term "understand-
ing, " a teacher might use the taxonomy to decide which of
several meanings he intended. If it meant that the student
was sufficiently aware of a situation or phenomenon to de-
scribe it in terms slightly different from those originally
used in describing it, this would correspond to the taxonomy
category of "Translation." Deeper understanding would be
reflected in the next-higher level of the taxonomy, "Inter-
pretation, 11 where the student would be expected to summa-
rize and explain the phenomenon in his description. And
there are other levels of the taxonomy which the teacher
could use to indicate still deeper "understanding." In short,
teachers and curriculum makers should find this a rela -
tively concise model for the analysis of educational out-
comes in the cognitive area of remembering, thinking, and
prob.lern solving.
3

Once they have classified the objectives they wish to


measure, teachers and testers working on evaluationprob-
lems may refer to the discussions of the problems of meas-
uring such objectives. The Handbook includes constructive
suggestions for measuring each class of objectives and of-
fers a number of examples of the different item types which
have been used by examiners.

Some research workers have found the categories of


'.!Seas a frarn.ework for vi.ewing the educational process and
analyzing its workings. For instance, the AERA Com-
mittee on Criteria of Teacher Effectiveness suggests its
use in analyzing the teacher's success in classroom teach-
ing. 2 B.loom used them in analyzing the kinds of learning
that take place in class discussions. 3 Equally important,
the psycho.logical relationships emp.loyed by the classifica-
tion scheme are suggestive of psycho.logical investigations
which could further our understanding of the educational
process and provide insight into the means by which the
learner changes in a specified direction.

But any of these uses demands a clear understanding


of the structure of the taxonomy, its principles of construc-
tion, and its organization. We hope this can be easily ac-
quired by a study of the introductory chapters. In addition,
it is suggested that the reader refer early and repeatedly
to the condensed version of the taxonomy which has been
placed at the back of the book in an appendix for easy ref-
erence. The condensed version gives an over-all view of
the classification system, brief definitions of the categories,
and a few examples of the objectives belonging in each cate-
gory. For quick reference and a general grasp of the pro-
ject, the condensed version of the taxonomy will be found
to be one of the most valuab.le parts of the book. The brief
overview of historical background plus the description of
problems and of the organization of the taxonomy project
found in the remainder of this Foreword should further

2 Remmers, H. H., et al, "Report of the Committee on


the Criteria of Teacher Effectiveness, 11 Review of Educa-
tional Research, 22 (1952), pp. 245,246. -
3 B.loom, B. S., "The Thought Processes of Students
in Discussion, " in Sydney J. French, Accent on Teaching,
New York: Harper & Bros., 1954.
4

orient the reader. Part I of the Handbook is intended to


develop some insight into the principles of development and
organization of the taxonomy, to develop an understanding
of the nature and significance of the cognitive domain, and
to give some help on the manner in which objectives may
be classified in the taxonomy.

Part II is the taxonomy proper. lt consists of the tax-


onomy categories, sequentially arranged as listed in the
condensed version and in the Table of Contents. Each one
of the categories contains, in order: (1) a definition of the
category; (2) illustrative objectives; (3) a discussion of
problems and considerations in testing objectives in the
category; and (4) examples of items testing objectives in
the category. Each test example is briefly discussed to
note what is required of the student and how this is achieved.

History

The idea for this c.lassification system was formed at


an informal meeting of college examiners attending the 1948
American Psychological Association Convention in Boston.
At this meeting, interest was expressed in a theoretical
framework which could be used to facilitate communication
among examiners. This group felt that such a framework
could do much to promote the exchange of test materials
and ideas about testing. In addition, it could be helpful in
stimulating research on examining and on the relations be-
tween examining and education. After considerable discus-
sion, there was agreement that such a theoretical framework
might best be obtained through a system of classifying the
goals of the educational process, since educational objec-
tives provide the basis for building curricula and tests and
represent the starting point for much of our educational
research.

This meeting became the first of a series of informal


annual meetings of college examiners. Gathering at a dif-
ferent university each year and with some changes in mem-
bership, this group has considered the problems invo.lved
in organizing a classification of educational objectives. The
group has also considered a great many other problems of
examining and of educational research. This is the first
product of these meetings.
5

The committee named on the title page was delegated


the task of organizing and writing the various parts of the
"cognitive" portion of the taxonomy, while the group con-
tinued in its efforts to develop the "affective" portion of the
taxonomy. As yet, however, the group is• still an informal
one without dues, regular membership, or the usual offi -
cers. Under such conditions, the committee,,and the editor
must take responsibility for the present product, although
"credit" for ideas, suggestions, and sound criticism should
be dislcibuted more widely among all those whc have ::i.t-
tended one or more meetings of the group.

Problems

One of the first prob.lems raised in our discussions


was whether or not educational objectives could be classi-
fied. lt was pointed out that we were attempting to classify
phenomena which could not be observed or manipulated in
the same concrete form as the phenomena of such fields as
the physical and bio.logical sciences, where taxonomies of
a very high order have already been developed. Neverthe-
less, it was the view of the group that educational objectives
stated in behavioral form have their counterparts in the
behavior of individuals. Such behavior can be observed
and described, and these descriptive statements can be
classified.

There was some concern expressed in the early meet-


ings that the availability of the taxonomy might tend to abort
the thinking and planning ofteachers with regard to curric-
ulum, particularly if teachers merely selected what they
believed to be desirab.te objectives from the .list provided
in the taxonomy. The process of thinking about educational
objectives, defining them, and relating them to teaching and
testing procedures was regarded as a very important step
on the part of teachers. lt was suggested that the taxonomy
could be most useful to teachers who have already gone
through some of the steps in thinking ab.out educational ob-
jectives and curriculum.

Some fear was expressed that the taxonomy might lead


to fragmentation and atomization of educational purposes
6

such that the parts and pieces finally placed into the clas-
sification might be very different from the more complete
objective with which one started. Although this was recog-
nized as a very real danger, one solution for this problem
appeared to be setting the taxonomy at a level of generality
where the loss by fragmentation would not be too great.
The provision of major categories as well as subcategories
in the taxonomy enables the user of the taxonomy to select
the level of classification which does least violence to the
statement of the objective. Furt her, the hierarchical char-
acter of the taxonomy enables the .user to more clearly
understand the place of a particular objective in relation to
other objectives.

Organizational principles

In discussing the principles by which a taxonomy might


be developed, it was agreed that the taxonomy should be an
educational - logical - psychological classification sys tem.
The terms in this order express the emphasis placed on
the different principles by which the taxonomy could be de -
veloped. Thus, first importance should be given to educa-
tional considerations. lnsofar as possible, the boundaries
between categories should be closely related to the distinc-
tions teachers make in planning curricula or in choosing
learning situations. lt is possible that teachers make dis -
tinctions which psychologists would not make in classifying
or studying human behavior. However, if one of the major
values of the taxonomy is in the improvement of communi-
cation among educators, then educational dis tinctions should
be given major consideration. Second, the taxonomy should
be a logical classification in that every effort should be
made to define terms as precisely as possible and to use
them consistently. Finally, the taxonomy should be con-
sistent with relevant and accepted psychological principles
and theories.

lt was further agreed that in constructing the taxonomy


every effort should be made to avoid value judgments about
objectives and behaviors. Neutrality with respect to educa-
tional principles and philosophies was to be achieved by
constructing a system which, insofar as it was possible,
7

would permit the inclusion of objectives from all educa-


tional orientations. Thus, it should be possible to classify
all objectives which can be stated as descriptions of stu-
dent behavior.

Three domains--cognitive, affective, and psychomotor

Our original plans called for a complete taxonomy in


thrce m::i.jor parts- -the cognitive, the a.ffective, and the
psychomotor domains. The cognitive domain, which is the
concern of this Handbook, includes those objectives which
deal with the recall or recognition of knowledge and the de-
velopment of intellectual abilities and skills. This is the
domain which is most central to the work of much current
test development. lt is the domain in which most of the
work in curriculum deve.lopment has taken place and where
the clearest definitions of objectives are tobe found phrased
as descriptions of student behavior. For these reasons we
started our work here, and this is the first of our work to
be published.

A second part of the taxonomy is the affective domain.


lt includes objectives which describe changes in interest,
attitudes, and values, and the development of appreciations
and adequate adjustment. Much of our meeting time has
been devoted to attempts at classifying objectives under
this domain. lt has been a difficult task which is still far
from complete. Several problems make it so difficult.
Objectives in this domain are not stated very precisely;
and, in fact, teachers do not appear to be very clear about
the learning experiences which are appropriate to these
objectives. lt is difficult to describe the behaviors appro-
priate to these objectives since the internal or covert feel-
ings and emotions are as significant for this domain as are
the overt behavioral manifestations. Then, too, our test-
ing procedures for the affective domain are still in the most
primitive stages. We hope to complete the task but are not
able to predict a publication date.

A third domain is the manipulative or motor-skill area.


Although we recognize the existence of this domain, we find
so little done about it in secondary schools or colleges,
that we do not believe the development of a classification
8

of these objectives would be very useful at present. We


would appreciate comments on this point from teachers and
other educational workers who are especially interested in
this domain of educational objectives.

Development of the cognitive domain

We were naturally hesitant about publishing the cogni-


tive-domain handbook without securing as widespread com-
ment and criticism as possible. Members of the group have
discussed the taxonomy with their colleagues in their own
institutions, with graduate students in curriculum and test-
ing, and with other groups of teachers and educational spe-
cialists. The criticisms and suggestions of these groups
have, whenever possible, been taken into consideration in
the present volume. A somewhat more formal presentation
was made in a symposium at the American Psychological
Association meetings in Chicago in 1951. 4

In spite of these means of communication, we still felt


the need for the comments, suggestions, and criticisms of
a larger and more representative group of educators, teach-
ers, and educational research workers. With this in mind,
we were very pleased when Longmans, Green and Company
agreed to print a preliminary edition of 1000 copies before
printing the final version of the Handbook. The preliminary
edition was sent to a large group of college and secondary
school teachers, administrators, curriculum directors, and
educational research specialists. This group was asked to
read the preliminary edition carefully and to offer criti-
cisms and suggestions, as well as additional illustrations
of objectives and test materials. They responded very gen-
erously and the present version of the Handbook has taken
many of their ideas into consideration. We are truly grate-
ful for the time and thought given to this work.
4 symposium: The Development of a Taxonomy of Edu-
cational Objectives, H. H. Remmers, Chairman. Partici-
pants: B. S. Bloom, Intellectual domain; D. R. Krathwohl,
Affective domain. Discussants: 0. K. Buros, O. H. Mowrer,
and J. M. Stalnaker . Fifty-ninth Annual Meeting of the
American Psychological Association, August 31-September
5, Chicago, Illinois.
9

Thus, this Handbook is truly a group product. lt is the


direct outgrowth of the thinking of over thirty persons who
attended the taxonomy conferences. lt is based on the work
of countless test constructors, curriculum workers, and
teachers. Several hundred readers of the preliminary edi-
tion have contributed criticisms, suggestions, and illustra-
tive materials. The committee which took responsibility
for the actual writing hope that this Handbook jus tifies the
enormous amount of time and effort devoted to it by the
many pcrsons involved. We regard the work as well worth
the effort if the taxonomy is found of value as a means of
communicating within the field of education. We submit it
in the hope that it will help to stimulate thought and research
on educational problems.

Since this is a handbook in which a classification scheme


is described and illustrated, the reader is cautioned against
attempting to read it as though it were a narrative or an ex-
position of a point of view which could easily be read from
cover to cover. The reader may find it profitable to read
the introduction and the condensed version of the taxon-
omy in the Appendix in order to get a quick overview of
the entire book. The chapter on educational objectives and
curriculum deve.lopment followed by the chapter on the clas-
s ification of educational objectives and test exercises will
enable him to secure a more thorough understanding of
the taxonomy and its possible uses. The remaining sec-
tions of the vo.lume--the taxonomy with illustrative objec-
tives and test items--should be read as the reader finds
these sections relevant to specific teaching, curriculum,
testing and research problems.
CHAPTER 1

THE NATURE AND DEVELOPMENT


OF THE TAXONOMY

The taxonomy as a classification device

The major purpose in constructing a taxonomy of edu-


cational objectives is to facilitate communication. In our
original consideration of the project we conceived of it as
a method of improving the e'X:change of ideas and materials
among test workers, as well as other persons concerned
with educational research and curriculum development.
For instance, the use of the taxonomy as an aid in devel-
oping a precise definition and classification of such vaguely
defined terms as "thinking" and "problem solving" would
enable a group of schoo.ls to discern the similarities and
differences among the goals of their different instructional
programs. They could compare and exchange tests and
other evaluative devices intended to determine the effec-
tiveness of these programs. They could, therefore, begin
to understand more completely the relation between the
learning experiences provided by these various programs
and the changes which take place in their students.

Set at this level, the task of producing a taxonomy, that


is, a classification of educationaloutcomes, is quite analo-
gous to the development of a plan for classifying books in a
library. Or, put more abstractly, it is like establishing
symbols for designating classes of objects where the mem -
bers of a class have something in common. In a library
these symbols might be the words "fiction" and "nonfiction"
and would apply to classes of books having something in
common. If the problem is essentially one of finding new
symbols for the classes, any set of symbols, numbers,
nonsense syllables, or words could be used. Thus, we
could have used the symbols "F" and "NF" for fiction and
nonfiction. Further, since the symbols selected are not
intended to convey that one class is of a higher order than
another or that there is any particular relationship between
the classes, they can be selected in very arbitrary fashion.

10
11

The labels "fiction" and "nonfiction" do not imply that the


one c.lass of book is better, more abstract, or more com-
plex than the other kind.

Of course, such a classüication procedure cannot be


a private fantasy since it is of value only if used by the work-
ers who wish to communicate with each other. Thus, the
classifications "fiction" and "nonfiction" are of value only
ü librarians use them. Acceptance of such classifications
by potential nsers is likely to be facilit:3.ted if the class
names are terms which are reasonably familiar to them
and ü these terms are given precise and usable definitions.
Thus, one might expect more ready acceptance of a library
c.lassification scheme if he took such a term as ''fiction,"
which is already in use, and defined it so that any com-
petent librarian would easily be able to determine which
books fit the c.lassification,

In summary then, the major task in setting up any kind


of taxonomy is that of selecting appropriate symbols, giv-
ing them precise and usable definitions, and securing the
consensus of the group which is to use them. Similarly,
developing a classüication of educational objectives requires
the selection of an appropriate list ofsymbols to represent
all the major types of educational outcomes, Next, there
is the task of defining these symbols with sufficient preci-
sion to permit and facilitate communication about these
phenomena among teachers, administrators, curriculum
workers, testers, educational research workers, and-others
who are likely to use the taxonomy. Finally, there' is the
task of trying the classification and securing the consensus
of the educational workers who wish to use the taxonomy.

What is to be classified

Before one can build a classification scheme, it must


be clear what it is that is to beclassified. This is notmuch
of a problem when one is classifying books. But descrip-
tions of curricula are set up on such different bases as de -
scriptions of teacher behavior, descriptions of instructional
methods, and descriptions of intended pupil behaviors. As
achievement testers and educational research workers, the
12
major phenomena with which we are concerned are the
changes produced in individuals as a result of educational
experiences. Such changes may be represented by the global
statements of the educational objectives of an educational
unit, or they may be represented by the actual description
of the student behaviors which are regarded as appropriate
or relevant to the objectives. Objectives may also be in-
ferred from the tasks, problems, and observations used to
test or evaluate the presence of these behaviors.

We are of the opinion that although the objectives and


test materials and techniques maybe specified in an almost
unlimited number of ways, the student behaviors involved
in these objectives can be represented by a relatively small
number of classes. Therefore, this taxonomy is designed
tobe a classification of the student behaviors which repre-
sent the intended outcomes of the educational process. lt
is assumed that essentially the same classes of behavior
may be observed in the usual range of subject-matter con-
tent, at different levels of education (elementary, high-
school, college), andin different schools. Thus, a single
set of classifications should be applicable in all these in-
stances.

lt should be noted that we are not attempting to clas-


sify the instructional methods used by teachers, the ways
in which teachers relate themselves to students, or the
different kinds of instructional materials they use. We are
not attempting to classify the particular subject matter or
content. What we are classifying is the intended behavior
of students-the ways in which individuals are to act, think,
or feel as the result of participating in some unit of in-
struction. (Only such of these intended behaviors as are
related to mental acts or thinking are included in the part
of the taxonomy developed in this Handbook.)

lt is rec~gnized that the actual behaviors of the stu-


dents after they have completed the unit of instruction may
differ in degree as well as inkind from the intended behav-
iors specified by the objectives. That is, the effects of
instruction maybe such that the students do not learna given
skill to the desired level of perfection; or, for that mat-
ter, they may not develop the intended skill to any degree.
13

This is a matter of grading or evaluating the goodness of


the performance. The emphasis in the Handbook is on ob-
taining evide.nce on the extent to which desired and intended
behaviors have been learned by the student. lt is outside
the scope of the task we set ourselves to properly treat the
matter of determining the appropriate value to be p.laced
on the different degrees of achievement of the objectivP.s
of instruction.

lt should also be noted that the intended behaviors spec-


ified by educational objectives do not include many of the
behaviors which psychologists are interested in classifying
and studying. One reason is that the intended behaviors
represent the social goals imposed upon youngsters by their
society or culture. Thus, the intended or desired behaviors
included in educational objectives usually do not include
undesirable or abnormal behaviors which are socially dis-
approved. Similarly, certain natural or unsocialized be-
haviors which might be of interest to psycho.logists may
fall outside the categories of the taxonomy.

Our present studies ofthe affective area have indicated


that the selective nature of intended behaviors will be even
more apparent there than in the cognitive domain. The fact
that we include objectives which specify social and emotional
adjustment as apart of the affective domain points up this
fact.

Guiding principles

Since the determination of classes and their titles is in


some ways arbitrary, there could be an almost infinite num-
ber of ways of dividing and naming the domains of educa-
tional outcomes. To guide us in our selection of a sing.le
classification system and to make the product more readily
understood and used, we established certain guiding prin -
ciples. First, since the taxonomy is tobe used in regard
to existing educational units and programs, we are of the
opinion that the major distinctions between classes should
reflect, inlarge part, the distinctions teachers make among
student behaviors. These distinctions are revealed in the
ways teachers state educational objectives. They are also
14
found in their curricular plans, their instructional material,
and their instructional methods. To the extent it was pos-
sible, the subdivisions of the taxonomy are intended to rec-
ognize these distinctions.

A second principle is that the taxonomy should be logi-


cally developed and internally consistent. Thus, each term
should be defined and used in a consistent way throughout
the taxonomy. In addition, each category should permit
locrical subnivi.si.ons whir.h r.an be clearly defined and fur-
th;r subdivided to the extent that appe;rs necessary and
useful.
A third principle is that the taxonomy should be con-
sistent withour present understanding ofpsychological phe-
nomena. Those distinctions which are psychologically un-
tenable, even though regularly made by teachers, would
be avoided. Further, distinctions which seem psycho-
logically important, even though not frequently made in edu-
cational objectives, would be favorably considered for in-
clusion. Perhaps it should be reiterated that, since the
taxonomy de als only with educationally intended behavior,
it falls considerably short of being a c.lassification scheme
for all psychological phenomena.

A fourth principle is that the classification should be a


purely descriptive scheme in which every type of educa-
tional goal can be represented in a relatively neutral fashion.
Thus, the Dewey decimal classification system for .libraries
describes all the classes of books. lt does not indicate the
value or quality of one class as compared withanother, nor
does it specify the number and kind of books any particular
library should possess. Similarly, to avoid partiality to
one view of education as opposed to another, we have at-
tempted to make the taxonomy neutral by avoiding terms
which implicitly convey value judgments and by making the
taxonomy as inclusive as possible. This means that the
kinds of behavioral changes emphasized by any institution,
educational unit, or educational philosophy can be repre-
sented in the classification. Another way of saying this is
that any objective which describes an intended behavior
should be classifiable in this system. On the other hand,
the taxonomy will probably include a greater variety of
behaviors than those emphasized byanyone school, course,
15

or educational philosophy. Thus, one course might have


objectives classifiable in four of the categories, another in
only three of the categories, and so on.

In one sense, however, the taxonomy is not completely


neutral. This stems from the already-noted fact that it is
a classification of intended behaviors. lt cannot be used to
classify educational plans which are made in such a way
that either the student behaviors cannot be specified or only
a single (unanalyzed) term or phrase such as "understand-
ing, " or "desirable citizen, 11 is used to describe the out-
comes. Only those educational programs which can be
specified in terms of intended student behaviors can be
classified.

Deve loping the taxonomy

Keeping in mind the aforementioned principles, we be-


gan work by gathering a large list of educational objectives
from our own institutions and the .literature. We determined
which part of the objective stated the behavior intended and
which stated the content or object of the behavior. We then
attempted to find divisions or groups into which the behav-
iors could be placed. We initially limited ourselves to
those objectives commonly referred to as knowledge, intel-
lectual abilities, and intellectual skills. (This area, which
we named the cognitive domain, may also be described as
including the behaviors: remembering; reasoning; problem
solving; concept formation; and, to a limited extent, crea-
tive thinking.) We proceeded to divide the cognitive objec-
tives into subdivisions from the simplest behavior to the
most complex. We then attempted to find ways of defining
these subdivisions in such a way that all of us working with
the material could communicate with each other about the
specific objectives as well as the testing procedures to be
included.
We have not succeeded in finding a method of classifi-
cation which would permit complete and sharp distinctions
among behaviors. ( This is discussed in more detail in
Chapter 3, which considers the problem of classifying ob-
jectives and test exercises.) There are two basic views.
First, we were again made aware of what any teacher
knows -two boys may appear to be doing the same thing;
16
but if we analyze the situation, we find they are not. For
example, two students solve an algebra problem. One
student may be solving it from memory, having had the
identical problem in class previously. The other student
has never met the problem before and must reason out the
solution by applying general principles, We can only dis-
tinguish between their behaviors as we analyze the relation
between the prob.lern and each student's background of ex-
perience. This then introduces a new aspect to the c.lassi-
fication prob.lern, uamely, Lhe expericntial backgrounds of
the students to whom the objective is to apply. As is indi-
cated in Chapter 3, this may be a very important factor in
using the taxonomy to classify test exercises.
A second difficulty in classification results from the
fact that the more complex behaviors include the simpler
behaviors. If we view statements of educational objectives
as intended behaviors which the student shall display at the
end of some period of education, we can then view the pro-
cess as one of change. As teachers we intend the learning
experiences to change the student's behavior from a sim-
pler type to another more complex one which in some ways
at least will include the first type.
One may take the Gestalt point ofview that the complex
behavior is more than the sum of the simpler behaviors ,
or one may view the complex behavior as being comp.letely
analyzab.le into simpler components. But either way, so
long as the simpler behaviors may be viewed as components
of the more complex behaviors, we can view the educational
process as one of building on the simpler behavior. Thus,
a particular behavior which is classified in one way at a
given time may develop and become integrated with other
behaviors to forma more complex behavior which is c.las-
sified in a different way. In order to find a single place for
each type of behavior, the taxonomy must be organized from
simple to comp.le;x: classes of behavior, Furthermore, for
consistency in c.lassification, a rule of procedure may be
adopted such that a particular behavior is placed in the most
complex class which is appropriate and relevant,

But, having specified that the classes shall be arranged


from simple to complex, we have exceeded the simple clas-
sification scheme which called primarily for a series of cate-
gories without order or rank. The next section addresses
itself to this prob.lern.
17

The problem of a hierarchy-classification versus taxonomy

We have so far used the terms 11 classification" and


"taxonomy" more or less interchangeably. lt is necessary,
however, that we examine the relationship between these
terms because, strictly speaking, they are not interchange-
able. Taxonomies, particularly Aris totelian taxonomies,
have certain structural rules which exceed in complexity
the rules of a classification system. While a classification
scheme may have many arbitrary elements, a taxonurny
scheme may not. A taxonomy must be so constructed that
the order of the terms must correspond to some "real"
order among the phenomena represented by the terms. A
classification scheme may be validated by reference to the
criteria of communicability, usefulness, and suggestive-
ness; while a taxonomy must be validated by demonstrating
its consistency with the theoretical views in research find-
ings of the field it attempts to order.

As educators and specialists in research, we are inter-


ested in a long-term inquiry into the nature of the phenomena
with which we deal, and no simple set of terms and defini-
tions by itself really is a satisfactory tool in making this
inquiry. We need amethod ofordering phenomenasuch that
the method of ordering reveals significant relationships
among the phenomena. This is the basic problem of a tax-
onomy-to order phenomena in ways which will reveal some
of their essential properties as well as the interrelation-
ships among them. Members of the taxonomy group spent
considerable time in attempting to find a psychological the-
ory which would provide a sound basis for ordering the cate-
gories of the taxonomy. We reviewed theories ofpersonality
and learning but were unable to find a single view which, in
our opinion, accounted for the varieties of behaviors repre -
sented in the educational objectives we attempted to classify.
We were reluctantly forced to agree with Hilgard 1 that each
theory of learning accounts for some phenomena very well
but is less adequate in accounting for others. What is needed
is alarger synthetic theoryoflearning thanat present seems
tobe available. We are of the opinion that our method of
ordering educational outcomes will make it possible to define
l Hilgard, E. R., Theories of Learning (Century Psy-
chology Series), New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts,1948.
18
the range of phenomena for which such a theory must ac-
count. The taxonomy also uses an order consistent with
research findings and it should provide Some clues as to
the nature of the theory which may be developed. This is
an extremely complex problem; and although it has prob-
ably not been solved completely satisfactorily, it is the
opinion of the writers that we have made some progress
toward a solution.
As the taxonomy is now organized, it contains six ma-
jor classes:
1 . 00 Knowledge
2. 00 Comprehension
3. 00 Application
4. 00 Analysis
5. 00 Synthesis
6. 00 Evaluation
Although it is possible to conceive of these major classes
in several different arrangements, the present one appears
to us to represent something of the hierarchical order of
the different classes of objectives. As we have defined
them, the objectives in one c.lass are likely to make use of
and be built on the behaviors found in the preceding classes
in this list. The reader is referred to the condensed ver-
sion of the taxonomy in the Appendix for abrief definition
of each c.lass and its subclasses. Fuller treatment of the
taxonomy will be found in Part II of this volume.

Our attempt to arrange educational behaviors from sim-


ple to complex was based on the ide_a that aparticular simple
behavior may become integrated with other equally simple
behaviors to forma more complex behavior. Thus our c.las-
sifications may be said to be in the form where behaviors
of type A form one class, behaviors of type AB form an-
other class, while behaviors of type ABC form still another
c.lass. If this is the real order from simple to complex, it
should be related to an order of difficulty such that prob-
lems requiring behavior A alone should be answered cor-
rectly more frequently than problems requiring AB. We
have studied a large number of problems occurring in our
comprehensive examinations and have found some evidence
to support this hypothesis. Thus, problems requiring knowl-
edge of specific facts are generally answered correct.ly more
19
frequently than problems requiring a knowledge of the uni-
versals and abstractions in a field. Problems requiring
knowledge of principles and concepts are correctly answered
more frequently than problems requiring both knowledge of
the principle and some ability to apply it in new situations.
Problems requiring analysis and synthesis are more diffi-
cult than problems requiring comprehension. Scatter plots
of the performances of individuals on one test composed of
items at a simple level in the taxonomy against their per-
formances on another test composed of items at a more
complex leve.l in the taxonomy show that it is more common
to find that individuals have low scores on complex prob-
lems and high scores on the less complex problems than
the reverse. Our evidence on this is not entirely satisfac-
tory, but there is an unmistakable trend pointing toward a
hierarchy of classes ofbehavior which is in accordance with
our present tentative classüication of these behaviors.

While we have been primarily concerned with the cog-


nitive domain, we have done some thinking about the clas -
sification versus taxonomy problem as it applies to all the
domains. The arrangement of behaviors from simple to
complex and the differentiation of behaviors into three do-
mains-the cognitive, the psychomotor, and the affective-
were marle primarily from an educational viewpoint. That
is, these are the distinctions which teachers make in the
development of curriculum and teaching procedures. We
as educational testers also make similar distinctions. As
we examine the classification system so far developed,
however, we note an additional dimension not usually con-
sidered in educational and teaching procedures. One of the
major threads running through all the taxonomy appears to
be a scale of consciousness or awareness. Thus, the be-
haviors in the cognitive domain are largely characterized
by a rather high degree of consciousness on the part of the
individual exhibiting the behavior, while the behaviors in
the affective domain are much more frequently exhibited
with a low level of awareness on the part of the individual.
Further, in the cognitive domain especially, it appears that
as the behaviors become more complex, the individual is
more aware of their existence. We are of the opinion that
this applies to the other domains as well. Clearly there is
no precise scale of consciousness which may be used to
20
test these speculations. However, sorne of our research
on the thoughtprocesses involvedin prob.lern solving 2 indi-
cates that students are able to give rnore cornplete reports
of their attack on a prob.lern as the prob.lern becornes more
complex, that is, as the prob.lern is c.lassified in the more
complex classes of intellectual abilities and skills.

lf the level of consciousness can be demonstrated tobe


an important dimension in the classification of behavior, it
would pose a great range of problems and point to a who.le
new set of relationships which would be of interest to re-
searchers in the field of educational psycho.logy. One might
hope that it would provide a basis for explaining why behav-
iors which are initially displayed with a high level of con-
sciousness become, after some time and repetition, auto-
matic or are accompanied by a low level of consciousness.
Perhaps this would provide a partial basis for explaining
why some learning, especially of the affective behaviors,
is so difficult. Perhaps it will also help to explain the
extraordinary retention of some learning - especially of
the psychomotor skills.

Is the taxonomy a useful too.l?

We have subjected this c.lassification scheme to a series


of checks, primarilyof communicability and comprehensive-
ness. A major check of cömmunicability was to determine
whether a number of workers could agree in their classifi-
cation of specific educational objectives and test materials.
Members of the taxonomy group discussed the c.lassifica-
tion of particular objectives in certain categories, and many
ambiguities and inconsistencies were pointed out which we
have attempted to remedy. Perhaps the mos t complete tes t
of the classifications and their definitions has been the at-
tempt of members of the group to classify a large number
of test items. One of the major problems in the classifi-
cation of test items which this study revealed is that it is
necessary in all cases to know or assume the nature of the
2 Bloom, B. S., and Broder, Lois, Problem-solving
processes of college students ( A Supplementary Educa-
tional Monograph), Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
Summer, 1950.
21
examinees 1 prior educational experiences. Thus, a test
problem could require a very complex type of problem-
solving behavior if it is a new situation, while it may re-
quire litt.le more than a simple kind of recall if the indi-
vidual has had previous learning experiences in which this
very problem was analyzed and discussed. This suggests
that, in general, test material can be satisfactorily classi-
fied by means of the taxonomy only when the context in which
the test problems were used is known or assumed.

Comprehensiveness, of course, is never fina.lly deter-


mined. We have repeatedly taken .lists of objectives found
in courses of study and other educational .literature and
have attempted to classify them. As yet, in the cognitive
domain we have encountered few statements of stu9,ent be-
haviors which could not be placed within the classification
scheme. However, although we have .litt.le difficulty in de-
t.ermining the major class within which a behavior falls,
we still are not satisfied that there are enough clearly de-
fined subclassifications to provide adequately for the great
variety of objectives we have attempted to classify.

In addition to comprehensiveness and communicability,


the taxonomy should satisfy two other criteria if it is to be
regarded as a useful and effective tool. First, it should
s tim ulate thought about educational problems. If the tax-
onomy is to prove a useful too.l for educational research
workers, it must aid them in formulating hypotheses about
Lhe learning process and changes in students. If it is to be
11seful for teachers and testers, it should provide a basis
l'or suggestions as to methods for deve.loping curricula,
·j nstructional techniques, and testing techniques. As a highly
organized and presumably comprehensive plan for classi-
fying educational behaviors, it should form the basis for
<!asily determining the availability of relevant evaluation
instruments, techniques, and methods so that each worker
can determine their appropriateness for his own work.
l'roper.ly used, a taxonomy should provide a very suggestive
:-wurce of ideas and materials for each worker and should
r.·csult in many economies in effort.
22

The early drafts of the taxonomy have already been ex-


tensively used. Same of the examiners have found it useful
as an aid in helping the faculty formulate objectives more
precise.ly and in seeing a possible range of educational ob-
jectives. The major categories of the taxonomy have been
used in several institutions as a basis for c.lassifying test
material. The parallelism of objectives in different subject-
matter fie.lds is highlighted by this procedure, thus suggest-
ing points of possible integration. Further, the transfer-
ability of testing techniques from one subject fie.ld to another
becomes clear. In at least one institution, diagnostic re-
ports of test results to students are made in re.lation to the
taxonomy. In this same institution, reports to the faculty
an the relation of the test results to the objectives andlearn-
ing experiences are analyzed in terms of the taxonomy.

Stimulation of thought an educational problems may


also occur through the use of the taxonomy in organizing
some of the .literature an educational research. Used in
this way, it gives a relatively fresh view to some of this
research and reveals many problems which have been largely
ignored by educational psycho.logists, curriculum workers,
and testers. Same of the studies on the relationship between
measures of scho.lastic aptitude or intelligence and the evi-
dence on the development of particular classes of behaviors
have been brought together. 3 This has revealed rather
strikingly the relatively low relationship between tests of
some of the more complex cognitive abilities and skills and
measures of inte.lligence. Thus, the view that measures of
the higher mental processes are synonymous with measures
of scho.lastic aptitude does not seem to be well-founded.
This view has frequently been used to support the conten-
tion that, since inte.lligence is presumed to be constant,
little can be done to develop some of the higher mental pro-
cesses through educative experiences.

3 Furst, Edward J., 11 Re.lationship between tests of


intelligence and tests of critical thinking and knowledge, 11
Journal of Educational Research, Val. 43, No. 8, April
1950, pp. 614-25.
23

Available evidence has also been assembled on the


interrelations among educational objectives. 4 • 5 These
data give considerable Support to the generalization that
the re.lationships among measures of different objectives
are determined by the nature of the .learning experiences
which the students have had. Thus, it seems possible un-
der one curriculum to integrate various behaviors in such
a way that very high corre.lations are obtained among the
measures of the different objectives while under another
(!Urricular plan the correlations among the measures of
the different objectives do not depart very much from
chance. This has been a long-neglected area in curricu-
lar planning and educational research.

We have also attempted to organize some of the litera-


ture on the growth, retention, and transfer of the different
types of educational outcomes or behaviors. Here we find
very little relevant research. 6 For the most part, research
on problems in retention, growth, and transfer has not
been very specific with respect to the particular behavior
involved. Thus, we are usua.lly not able to determine from
this research whether one kind of behavior is retained for
a langer period oftime than another or which kinds of edu-
cative experiences are most efficient in producing a par-
ticular kind of behavior. Many c.laims have been made for
different educational procedures, particularly in relation
to permanence of learning; but seldom have these been but-
tressed by research findings.

Altogether, the taxonomy is suggestive in pointing to


a large number of problems in the field of education and
testing. If the taxonomy could do nothing more than this,
it would be useful. Although there are dangers in devising
4 Furst, Edward J., "Effect of the organization of .learn-
ing experiences upon the organization of learning outcomes,"
Journal of Experimental Education, XVIII ( March 1954),
pp. 215-28.
5 Dressel, Paul L. , and Mayhew, Lewis B. , General
Education: Explorations in Evaluation, Washington, D. C .:
American Council on Education, 1954, pp. 249-53.
6 Several of the more relevant references are listed
in the footnotes on page 42.
24

a classification scheme which might tend to rigidify our


thinking about education, the relatively chaotic nature of
our field at present and the great emphasis on persuasive
skills rather than on research findings for claims in the
field of education justify some procedure such as this for
ordering the phenomena with which we deal.

A final criterion is that the taxonomy must be accepted


and used by the workers in the field if it is to be regarded
as a useful and effective tool. Whether or not it meets this
criterion can be determined only after a sufficient amount
of time has elapsed. We have attempted to secure the par-
ticipation of a large number of achievement testers and
evaluation specialists in the actual development and criti-
cism of the c.lassification scheme. The bulk of the com-
ments from administrators, teachers, curriculum special-
ists, and educational research workers on the preliminary
edition of the taxonomy indicate that there is a real need
for this kind of device. We do not regard it as perfect or
as completed. We expect to continue to work on the de-
ve.lopment of the other domains and to revise this Handbook
as experience dictates the need for improvement. We soli-
cit your help in its further development by asking that you
send us the suggestions which occur to you as you attempt
to understand it and as you develop a body of experience
through its use.
CHAPTER 2

EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES AND

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

We have had some question about the relevance of this


Hection in a handbook devoted to the details of a classifica-
tion system. We have finally included it because we be-
Lieve the classification and evaluation of educational objec-
1.ives must be considered as a part of the total process of
curriculum development. Same of these considerations help
l.o clarify the distinctions made in the taxonomy. lt is
hoped that many teachers will find this chapter useful as a
:-mmmary of some of the arguments for inclusion of a great-
() r range of educational objectives than is typical at the
Hecondary schoo.l or college level.

Problems of developing curriculum and instruction are


11sual7 considered in relation to four major types of ques-
1.i.ons. ·
1. What educational purposes or objectives should
the school or -course seek to attain?
2. What learning experiences can be provided that
are likely to bring about the attainment of these
purposes?
3. How can these learning experiences be effective -
ly organized to he.lp provide continuity and se-
quence for the learner and to help him in inte -
grating what might otherwise appear as isolated
learning experiences?
4„ How can the effectiveness of learning experi-
ences be evaluated by the use of tests and other
systematic evidence-gathering procedures?

1 The content of this section has been largely drawn


l't·om Ralph W „ Tyler, "Achievement Testing and Curricu-
111111 Construction, " Trends in Student Personnel Work,
1,;. G. Williamson, Ed., Minneapolis, Minn.: University
,,r Minnesota Press, 1949, pp„ 391-407.
25
26
We are here concerned primarily with the first of these
questions: the formulation and classification of education-
al objectives.

By educational objectives, we mean explicit formula-


tions of the ways in which students are expected tobe
changed by the educative process. That is, the ways in
which they will change in their thinking, their feelings, and
their actions. There are many possible changes that can
take place in students as a result of .learning experiences,
but since the time and resources of the school are limited,
only a few of the possibilities can be realized. lt is im-
portant that the major objectives of the school or unit of
instruction be clearly identified if time and effort are not
to be wasted on less important things and if the work of the
school is to be guided by some plan.

The formulation of educational objectives is a matter


of conscious choice on the part of the teaching staff, based
on previous experience and aided by consideration of sev-
eral kinds of data. The final selection and ordering of the
objectives become a matter of making use of the learning
theory and philosophy of education which the faculty ac-
cepts.

One type of source commonly used in thinking about


objectives is the information available about the students.
What is their present leve 1 of development? What are their
needs? What are their interests? Another source for ob-
jectives is available from investigations of the conditions
and problems of contemporary life which make demands on
young people and adults and which provide opportunities
for them. What are the activities that individuals are ex-
pected to perform? What are the problems they are likely
to encounter? What are the opportunities they are likely to
have for service and self-realization?

Another source of suggestions for objectives comes


from the nature of the subject matter and the deliberations
of subject-matter specialists on the contributions their
subject is able to make to the education of the individual.
What is the conception of the subject field? What are the
27

types of learning which canarise froma study of that sub-


ject matter? What are the contributions that the subject
can make in relation to other subjects?

lt is likely that a consideration of these three sources


will result in a suggested list of objectives which require
more time and effort than the school has at its disposal.
The problem of selecting among possible objectives as well
as the determination of relative emphasis to be given to
;;-arious objectives requires the use of s01ne guiding con ··
ceptions. The philosophy of education of the school serves
as one guide, since the objectives to be finally included
should be related to the school 's view of the "good life for
the individual in the, good society. 11 What are the important
values? What is the proper relation between man and so-
ciety? What are the proper relations between man and
man?

Finally, educational objectives must be related to a


psychology of learning. The faculty must distinguish goals
that are feasible from goals that are unlikely to be at-
tained in the time available, under the conditions which are
possible, and with the group of students to be involved.
The use of a psychology of learning enables the faculty to
determine the appropriate placement of objectives in the
learning sequence, helps them discover the learning condi-
tions under which it is possible to attain an objective, and
provides a way of determining the appropriate interre lation -
ships among the objectives.

lt should be clear from the foregoing that objectives


are not only the goals toward which the curriculum is
shaped and toward which instruction is guided, but they
are also the goals that provide the detailed specification
for the construction and use of evaluative techniques. Sev-
eral of the sources which may be of value to the reader are
listed in the footnotes. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

2 Dresse 1, Paul L., "Evaluation Procedures for Gen-


eral Education Objectives, 11 Educational Record, April 1950,
pp. 97-122.
3 Lindquist, E. F., (Editor), Educational Measure-
rnent, Washington, D. C.: American Council on Education,
1951, chap. 5.
28

A test of the achievement of students is a test of the extent to


which the students have attained these educational objec-
tives. An achievement test is an adequate and valid test if
it provides evidence of the extent to which students are at-
taining each of the major objectives of the unit of instruc-
tion.

The cognitive objectives derived from a process like


that described in the foregoing paragraphs may, for dis -
cussion purposes, be divided into two parts. One would bc
the simple behavior of remembering or reca.lling knowledge
and the other, the more complex behaviors of the abilities
and skills. The following section discusses these two divi-
sions in turn, considering their nature, their appearance
in the taxonomy, and their place in the curriculum.

Knowledge as ~ taxonomy category

Probably the most common educational objective in


Arrierican education is the acquisition of knowledge or in-
formation. That is, it is desired that as the result of com-
pleting an educational unit, the student will be changed with
respect to the amount and kind of knowledge he possesses.
Frequently knowledge is the primary, sometimes almost
the sole kind of, educational objective in a curriculum. In
almost every course it is an important or basic one. By
knowledge, we mean that the student can give evidence that
he remembers, eitherby recalling or by recognizing, some
idea or phenomenon with which he has had experience in
the educational process. For our taxonomy purposes, we
are defining knowledge as little more than the remembering

4 Thomas, R. Murray, Judging Student Progress, New


York: Longmans, Green & Co., 1954, chap. 1.
5 Remmers, H. H., and Gage, N. L., Educational
Measurement and Evaluation, Revised Edition, New York:
Harper & Bros., 1955, chap.1.
6 Tyler, Ralph W., and Smith, Eugene, Appraising
and Recording Student Progress, Vol. III, New York:
Harper & Bros., 1942, chap. 1.
29

of the idea or phenomenon in a form very close to that in


which it was originally encountered.

This type of objective emphasizes most the psycho-


logical processes of remembering. Knowledge may also
involve the more complex processes of relating and judg-
ing, since it is almost impossible to present an individual
with a knowledge problem which includes exactly the same
stimuli, signals, or cues as were present in the original
learning situation. Thus, any test Situation involving knowl-
edge requires some organization and reorganization of the
problem to furnish the appropriate signals and cues .linking
it to the knowledge the individual possesses. lt may be
helpful in this case to think of knowledge as something filed
or stored in the mind. The task for the individual in
each know.ledge test situation is to find the appropriate
signals and cues in the prob.lern which will most effective-
ly bring out whatever knowledge is filed or stored. For
instance, almost everyone has had the experience of being
unab.le to answer a question involving recall when the ques -
tion is stated in one form, and then having litt.le difficulty
in remembering the necessary information when the ques -
tion is restated in another form. This is well illustrated
by John Dewey's story in which he asked a c.lass, 11 What
would you find if you dug a hole in the earth? 11 Getting no
response, he repeated the question; again he obtained no-
thing but silence. The teacher chided Dr. Dewey, 11 You're
asking the wrong question. 11 Turning to the class, she
asked, 11 What is the state of the center of the earth? 11 The
class replied in unison, 11 Igneous fusion. 11

John Dewey's story also illustrates the rote recall na-


ture of some know.ledge learning. The emphasis on knowl-
edge as involving litt.le more than remembering or recall
distinguishes it from those conceptions of knowledge which
involve 11 understanding," "insight, 11 or which are phrased
as "rea.lly know, 11 or 11 true knowledge. 11 In these latter con-
ceptions it is implicitly assumed that knowledge is of little
value if it cannot be utilized in new situations or in a form
very different from that in which it was originally encoun-
tered. The denotations of these latter concepts would usu-
ally be close to what have been defined as 11 abilities and
skills 11 in the taxonomy.
30

Whether or not one accepts this latter position, it is


sufficient to note that knowledge by itself is one of the most
common educational objectives. The most cursory read -
ing of the standardized tests available or of teacher-made
tests would indicate that tremendous emphasis is given in
our schools to this kind of remembering or recall. A com-
prehensive taxonomy of educational objectives must, in
our opinion, include all the educational objectives repre-
sented in American education without making judgments
about Lheir value, 1neaningfu.lness, or appropriateness.
Knowledge, therefore, is one of our taxonomy categories.

The knowledge category in particular and, as noted


earlier, the classifications of the taxonomy in general
range from the simple to the more complex behaviors and
from the concrete or tangible to the abstract or intangible.
By simple we mean elemental, isolable bits of phenomena
or information, e .g., "the capital of lllinois is Springfield:'
or "Arkansas contains much bauxite." Thus, our base sub-
classification is titled "knowledge of specifics . " At the
upper end of the knowledge category the subclassifications
refer to more complex phenomena. Thus, remembering a
theory is a more complex task than remembering a specific
such as the capital of a state. Knowledge of the theory of
evolution, for instance, would be very complex. Accord-
ingly, the subclassification at the complex end of the knowl-
edge category is tit.led the "knowledge of theories and
structures."

The knowledge categories may also be viewed as run-


ning from concrete to abstract. Thus, in general, knowl-
edge of specifics will refer to concrete, tangible phenom -
ena: "Insects have sixlegs;" "Most glass is britt.le. 11 But
the more complex categories, as, for example, the name
"knowledge of theories and structures" implies, tend to
deal with abstract phenomena.

lt might sometimes be useful for taxonomy purposes


to distinguish knowledge with regard to the different speci-
alties, fields of knowledge, or subdivisions of work in our
schools. Thus, it would be possible to distinguish knowledge
31

about the social sciences from knowledge about the physical


sciences, and knowledge ofphysics from knowledge of chem-
istry, etc. Likewise, knowledge about man could be dis-
tinguished from knowledge about physical objects, etc. The
taxonomy as developed here should be applicable to any of
the subdivisions of knowledge or educational units in which
school curricula are divided, but no attempt will be made
to make all the possible applications or subdivisions in
this Handbook. The reader may wish to deve lop such further
classifications as arc ;iecessary for his werk, using thc tax-
onomy as a basis.

What is knowable

One of the major problems with regard to knowledge is


determining what is knowable, for there are different ways
in which something can be said to be known. Adding to this
problem is the fact that different criteria of accuracy and
authenticity are applied to knowledge in different areas, at
least the knowledge tobe learned in school. To a large ex-
tent knowledge, as taught in American schools, depends
upon some external authority; some expert or group of ex-
perts is the arbiter of knowledge. Some information is the
result of little more than convention and consensus. That
is, a group of workers or experts in the field has come to
some agreement on the ways in which particular terms
will be defined, on the particular referents for selected
symbols, or the most effective or practical ways in which
to organize a field or attack problems in it. For instance,
lexicographers appear to make many arbitrary decisions
in preparing a dictionary. The symbol system for punctu-
ation is solely a matter of convention. Memorizing the con-
jugation of verbs and the declension of nouns is accepted
as the proper approach to learning some foreign languages.
Other information is known as the result of logical tests of
consistency either by definition or by some logic of rela-
tionship. Certain kinds of geometry, mathematical propo-
sitions, and mathematical models are examples. Finally,
some knowledge or information is known as the result of
some historical, experiential, or pragmatic test. Thus,
historical information is known as the result of a number
of observations which are in agreement or which satisfy
32
particular historical tests of their authenticity. Scientific
information is known as a result of some observation, experi -
ment, or test which meets the canons of scientific method-
ology.

lt should also be noted that the validity, accuracy, and


meaningfulness of information are relative in many ways
and always are related to a particular period of time. Thus,
what is known in 1955 was not known in the same way in a
previous era and will presumably undergo some changes in
the future. Compare the way we pictured the atom twenty
years ago with today's view of it.

There is also a geographical and cultural aspect to


knowledge in the sense that what is known to one group is
not necessarily known to another group, c.lass, or culture.
lt must be clear from all this, that knowledge is always
partial and relative rather than inclusive and fixed.

Justification for the development of know.ledge

Know.ledge or information may be justified as an im-


portant objective or outcome of learning in many ways.
Perhaps the most common justification is that with increase
in knowledge or information there is a development of one 's
acquaintance with reality. Such reality may represent what
is known by convention or definition, what are known as the
findings or outcome of inquiry in the various fields, what
are known as the more fruitful ways of attacking problems
in the field, or what are known as the more useful ways
of organizing a field. lt is assumed that as the number
of things known by an individual increases, his acquaint-
ance with the world in which he lives increases. But, as
has been pointed out before, we recognize the point of view
that truth and know.ledge are on.ly relative and that there
are no hard and fast truths which exist for all time and
all p.laces. Nonetheless, most educators hold it desir-
able that the learner increase his knowledge of what is
currently known or accepted by the experts or specialists
in a field, whether or not such knowledge, in a philosophi-
cal sense, corresponds to "reality. "
33

The selection of know.ledge as an educational objective


usual.ly assumes some stability in the world, in the culture,
or in the subject field. lf the knowledge learned at one
tiine is not regarded as very useful or accurate at another
time, there would be little point in the student learning it.
lt is likely that the stability of knowledge varies consider-
ably with the field or prob.lern under consideration. Some
fields or topics are undergoing such rapid transition that
what is known at one tiine is not accepted or is altered
shortly therea.fter „ Under such conditions the acquisition
of know.ledge could not be justified for its own sake but would
have to be justified in relation to the other educational ob-
jectives, a position which is discussed next.

Another justification for the teaching of know.ledge is


that it is quite frequent.ly regarded as basic to all the other
ends or purposes of education. Problem solving or think-
ing cannot be carried on in a vacuum, but must b.e based
upon knowledge of some of the "realities. 11 The inte.llec-
tual abilities represented in the taxonomy assume know.1-
edge as a prerequisite. Know.ledge becomes either the
material with which the problem solving deals or it be-
comes the testof the adequacy and accuracyof the prob.lern
solving. Thus in fields undergoing rapid transition, knowl-
edge may be taught, not so much with the expectation that
it will prove eternal.ly "true, 11 but as a basis for .learning
the methodology of the fie.ld and as a basis for attacking the
problems therein. Even the manipulative and motor skills
assume some know.ledge about the materials, methods, or
tools that are used. Further, in another sense, all of the
affective classifications make use of or are based upon
knowledge. Thus, it is generally he.ld that interests are
developed as the result of anincrease in information; like-
wise, attitudes and appreciations are regarded as having
some base in know.ledge or information. Even the objec-
tives involving personal adjustment are quite frequent.ly
based upon the notion that a person must have some knowl-
edge about hiinself before he can proceed to reso.lve bis
conflicts, anxieties, or other individual difficulties. lt is
clear that justification of knowledge for all these uses will
usually involve know.ledge in re.lation to other objectives,
rather than knowledge for its own sake.
34

Still another justification for the development ofknowl-


edge as an objective of education arises from the status of
knowledge in our own culture. Many workers assume a
positive relationship between increase in knowledge and
increase in maturity. In fact, quite frequently the increas-
ing maturity of individuals or groups is judged in terms of
their increasing knowledge about themselves or about the
world in which they live. Knowledge is also frequently re-
garded as an important criterion of brightness or intelli-
gence. This is reflected in imel.ligence testing where
vocabulary or knowledge questions predominate and are
regarded as signs of intelligence. In many schools, knowl-
edge is regarded as the primary index of the leve.l of edu-
cation an individual has attained. This is indicated by the
content of our standardized achievement test. The layman
frequently regards knowledge and education as being syn-
onymous. The great emphasis on radio quiz programs and
tests of either historical or contemporary information which
appear in newspapers and magazines further reflects the
status of knowledge in our culture. There is little doubt
that our culture places tremendous weight on knowledge or
information as an important characteristic of the individual.

Many teachers and educators prize knowledge to some


extent because of the simplicity with which it can be taught
or learned. Mass methods, such as lectures, audio-visual
methods, printedmaterial,and the like, can be readily used
for the acquisition ofinformation. Quite frequently we tend
to think of knowledge as something which is learned as the
result of simply presenting it to the learner in one form of
communication or another. Clearly related to this is the
ease with which it is possible to gauge the extent to which
the student has acquired knowledge. Practically all teach-
er.s have considerable confidence in their ability to build
tests of knowledge. Because of the simplicity of teaching
and evaluating knowledge, it is frequently emphasized as
an educational objective out of all proportion to its useful-
ness or its relevance for the development of the individual.
In effect, the teacher and school tend tolook where the light
is brightest and where it is least difficult to develop the
individual.
35

Requiring that a student learn certain knowledge as-


sumes a prediction that the student is likely to be able to
make some use of the knowledge in the future. Thus,
knowledge about phenomena relevant to the specialization
of the engineer is rnaxima.lly useful if the student is tobe-
come an engineer. Requiring the student to learn about en-
gineering phenomena means that we can predict that he will
be an engineer or that the knowledge will transfer to other
areas where he is like ly to be able to use it. Knowledge
required of students prior to their making a firm vocational
choice will need to have more general relevance and wide-
spread usefulness than after a firm choice is rnade. Ex-
tensive knowledge requirernents in rapidly changing special-
ized fields need to be checked against the best possible
prediction of what knowledge will be of continuing use and
what knowledge is necessary for a grasp of the current
known field. The teacher and the curriculurn specialist
must take all these factors into account indeterrnining what
knowledge to select.

Undoubtedly the greatest predictability arises within


the school itself where it rnay be known that the know.ledge
learned in one class will be used in one way or another in
a subsequent course. Conversely, there is least predict-
ability in the attempt to re late what is learned in the c lass -
roorn to what the student rnay need as a citizenor specialist.

Our general understanding of learning theory would


seem to indicate that knowledge which is organized and re-
lated is better learned and retained than knowledge which
is specific and isolated. By this we rnean that learning a
large number of isolated specifics is quite difficult sirnply
because of the rnultiplicity of items tobe remembered. Fur-
ther, they cannot be retained very we.11 if they are kept in
such isolation. Thus one hundred nonsense syllables would
be more difficult tolearn than an equalnumber of syllables
in a meaningful poern. Specifics can be learned in relation
to a general abstraction, and as a result can be rernern-
bered or retained best in this relationship. When learning
takes place in this way, it is possible for an individual who
remembers the generalization to proceed re.latively easily
to some ofthe specifics subsumed under that genera.lization.
36
On the other hand, generalizations or abstractions are re la-
tively difficult tolearn unless they are related to appropri-
ate concrete phenomena. A generalization isolated from
the phenomena it covers is very difficult to learn and very
hard to retain. As a matter of fact, some definitions of
intelligence 7 regard the abstractness of the ideas an indi-
vidual can understand as a good index of the level of intel-
ligence.

Curricular decisions to be made about knowledge objectives

Four decisions to be made with respect to the nature


of the knowledge objectives included in the curriculum should
be noted. These relate to "How much knowledge should be
required learning? "; "How precisely need the student learn
the required knowledge? "; "How is knowledge best organized
for learning? '; and "How meaningful need required knowl-
edge-learning be to the student? 11

Decisions with respect to "How much knowledge should


be required learning?" must strike a balance between at-
tempts to include all the knowledge the individual might con-
ceivably acquire in a particular subject and only that knowl-
edge which is most basic to the subject. Rarely does the
educator lean toward the latter of these two alternatives.
Some educators frequently assume that the knowledge which
the expert or specialist needs to possess about a field or
topic and the knowledge which the beginning student may
reasonably be expected to learn are identical. Such an as -
sumption tends to overestimate the student's ability to learn
and retain information. These educators must decide
whether the student's time and effort are best used in be-
coming acquainted with the major knowledge in the field or
in thoroughly mastering that knowledge which is basic to
further learning in the field. For instance, in the field of
mathematics it would be possible for the student to become
aware of the existence and nature of the major mathemati-
cal techniques or to concentrate on learrting the fundamen-
tals which would permit him to later pick up these tech-
niques on his own.
'/ See Stoddard, George D., The Meaning of Intelli-
gence, New York: The Macmillan Co., 1944.
37

A second decision, the degree of precision tobe re-


quired of the student, is not unrelated to the first. Thus,
requiring the student to "become aware of the existence and
nature of the major mathematical techniques" would pre-
sumably permit the student some .latitude in the precision
of his recall of the details of the techniques. On the other
band, to "thoroughly master that mathematical knowledge
which is basic to further learning" implies a rather high
standard of precision in the learning of this material. This
dedsion aboul lhe precision lo be required of the sludenl
exists at all leve.1s of knowledge. Thus, even in the sim-
plest type of objective such as knowledge of termino.logy,
it is quite conceivable for a student to learn definitions of
terms at many different leve.ls of accuracy and precision.
Usually greater precision is required at later stages of
training. Thus, the student is introduced to an item of
knowledge at a general but accurate level, gradually mak-
ing finer and finer distinctions as he uses the item until
he has reached the more detailed and precise level of the
expert.

A third decision relates to the best organization of


know.ledge to facilitate learning. As previously noted, the
cases of the specialist and the student are not identical. The
organization the specialist finds most usefu.l is not neces-
sarily the organization that provides the easiest learning
path for the student. The decision to be made is whether
to use an organization externally imposed by some authority
or expert as compared with an organization that fits the in -
ternal state of the learner at his particular stage of de{.-el-
opment.

A fourth decision with respect to the nature of knowl-


edge objectives in the curriculum relates to the immediate
as opposed to the future need of the student for this infor-
mation. A student can memorize a body of information
whether or not he finds immediate use for it or whether it
meets any of his present needs. This is particu.larly true
once the s tudent becomes habituated to this kind of learning,
as many of our students have. Many schools orient their
students in this direction by the use of grades, examina-
tions, and competition. lt is likely that if the teacher
believes the learning of knowledge is important or can
38
communicate the importance ofit to the students, there will
be little difficulty in obtaining learning of even the most
artificial and esoteric kinds of information.

The nature of abilities and skills

Although information or knowledge is recognized as an


important outcome of education, very few teachers would
be satisfied to regard this as the primary or the sole out-
come of instruction. What is needed is some evidence that
the students can do something with their knowledge, that is,
that they can apply the information to new situations and
problems. lt is also expected that students will acquire
generalized techniques for dealing with new problems and
new materials. Thus, it is expected that when the student
encounters a new problem or situation, he will select an ap-
propriate technique for attacking it and will bring to bear
the necessary information, both facts and principles. This
has been labeled 11 critical thinking" by some, 11 reflective
thinking" by Dewey and others, and 11 problem solving" by
still others, In the taxonomy we have used the term "in-
tellectual abi.lities and skills. 11 The most general opera-
tional definition of these abilities and skills is that the
individual can find appropriate information and techniques
in his previous experience to bring to bear on new problems
and situations. This requires some analysis or understand-
ing ofthe new situation; it requires a background of knowl-
edge or methods which can be readily utilized; and it also
requires some facility in discerning the appropriate rela-
tions between previous experience and the new situation.

Arts or skills + knowledge = abilities

Sometimes in educational achievement testing we wish


to distinguish between what we might call II intellectual
abilities II and 11 intellectual arts and skills . 11 11 Arts and
skills II refer to modes of operation and generalized tech-
niques for dealing with problems. In testing for arts and
skills, the problems and materials are of such a nature
that little or no specialized and technical information is
required. Whatever information is required is assumed to
be part of the general fund of knowledge of the group being
39
tested. The emphasis in testing is on the examinee's com-
petence in using a generalized method of operating or deal-
ing with a new problem situation. The arts and skills em -
phasize the mental processes of organizing and reorganizing
material to achieve a particular purpose.

The intellectual abilities , on the other hand, refer


to situations in which the individual is expected to bring
specific technical information to bear on a new problem.
They represent combinations of knowledge and intellectual
arts and skills. In solving problems requiring intellectual
abilities, the student is expected to organize or reorganize
a problem, to recognize what material is appropriate, to
remember such material, and to make use of it in the prob-
lern situation. In the case both of abilities and of skills,
the problems are intended to be new and unfamiliar to the
student.

Although this distinction between intellectual abili-


ties and intellectual skills may be made in achievement test-
ing, it is. rather difficult to classify educational objectives
and test items as abilities or skills without a full knowledge
of the prior experience of the students. lt is for this rea-
son that the distinction has been omitted in the taxonomy
and is only briefly mentioned here.

Justification for the development of intellectual abilities and


skills

Justification for the development of intellectual abili-


ties and skills can readily be derived from a consideration
of the nature of the society and culture in which we live, the
knowledge that is available to us, and the kind of citizen the
schools seek to develop. Further justification may be de-
rived from what is known in educational psychology about
the permanence of various kinds of learning and the extent
to which various kinds of learning can be transferred to
new situations.

The development of problem-solving skills (intellec-


tual abilities and skills) is not equally necessary in all
societies and cultures. lt is possible to imagine a society
or culture which is relatively fixed. Such a society repre-
40
sents a closed system in which it is possible to predict in
advance both the kinds ofproblems individuals will encounter
and the solutions which are appropriate to those problems.
Where such predictions can be made in advance, it is pos-
sible to organize the educational experiences so as to give
each individual the particular knowledge and the specific
methods needed for solving the problems he will encounter.
Probably the nearest one can come to such a closed system
in our culture is in some aspects of military life. For in-
stance, if one i.s training an individual tobe a radio techni-
cian for military work, it is frequently possible to know in
advance exactly what kind of radio circuits he will have to
work with. Under these conditions it is possible to reduce
the amount of training to only these particular radio cir -
cuits and to teach the individual how to solve all the fore-
seeable difficulties he will encounter in working with them.
Such training can be quick and efficient, but it is highly
restricted since it is applicable to only a very limited range
of situations.

Whatever the case in the past, it is very clear that


in the middle of the 20th century we find ourselves in a
rapidly changing and unpredictable culture. lt seems almost
impossible to foresee the particular ways in which it will
change in the near future or the particular problems which
will be paramount in five or ten years. Under these condi-
tions, much emphasis must be placed in the schools on the
development of generalized ways of attacking problems and
on knowledge which can be applied to a wide range of new
situations. That is, we have the task of preparing indivi-
duals for problems that cannot be foreseen in advance, and
about all that can be done under such conditions is to help
the student acquire generalized inte.llectual abilities and
skills which will serve him well in many new situations.
This places faith in the intel.lectual virtues as providing
some form of stability for the individual who must find or
make some order in his world.

However, even in the relatively stable culture or so-


ciety, we do have to recognize that all knowledge is partial
and that each situation the individual encounters has some
unique characteristics. Forced to act, the individual has
41

the task of taking what know.ledge he has (which is only


partially appropriate to a situation) and determining its
relevance to the new situation. Since each situation is
unique, the individual must be able to recognize which es-
sential characteristics of the new situation are related to
situations he has a.lready encountered; then he must apply
the correct knowledge and method with appropriate modi-
fications. Clearly it is impossible to give the individual all
the knowledge he will ever need for every new situation he
will encuunler. IL is pus:üble, however, to help hini. acquirc
that knowledge which has been found most useful in the past,
and to help him develop those intellectual abilities and
skills which will enable him to adapt that knowledge to the
new situations.

The importance of the intellectua.l abilities and skills


is further illustrated by our recognition of the individual's
ability to independently attack his problems as a desirable
sign of maturity. Individuals are expected, as they mature,
to solve problems on their own and to make decisions wise.ly
on the basis of their own thinking. Further, this independ-
ent prob.lern solving is regarded as one indication of the
individual 's adjustment. lt is recognized that unless the
individual can do his own problem solving he cannot main-
tain his integrity as an independent personality.

Close.ly allied to this concept of maturity and integ-


rity is the concept of the individual as a member of a demo-
cracy. Citizens are expected to make important and inde-
pendent decisions about governmental problems and about
their political future. It is clear that many of these deci-
sions require problem so.lving of a very high order. lt is
impossible to tel1 an individual in advance how to vote or
even the bases on which he should vote. These are matters
he must decide repeatedly throughout his .life whenever a
major election takes place. But more than specific elec-
tions and voting is the concept of individuals in a democracy
as independent decision-makers who, in the last analysis,
are responsible for the conduct of a democratic politica.l
system as well as a democratic way of life.
42
The above justifications for the development of intel-
lectual abilities and skills reflect a number of value compo-
nents in relation to the concept of the goodlife. The follow-
ing two reasons have to do primarily with the efficiency of
the learning process.

As we have defined intellectual abilities and skills ,


they are more widely applicable than knowledge. If we are
concerned with the problem of transfer of training, by defi-
nition we would select intellectual abilities and skills as
having greater transfer value.

A second reason for the efficiency of intellectual abil-


ities and skills in learning is their permanence. From
psychological theory (e. g., reinforcement theory) it would
seem reasonable to expect greater permanence of learning
for those outcomes of education which can be generalized
and applied in a number of different situations throughout
the individual 's formal educational experience than for those
outcomes which are so specific that they are likely to be
encountered only once or at the most a few times through-
out the educational program. lt would seem desirable to
determine whether research evidence is in support of our
logical and pedagogical distinctions. While only a few stu-
dies in the literature deal with this problem, the findings
are in general support of the foregoing. 8, 9, 10

Finally, the foregoing discussion has illustrated the


importance of the abilities and skills for both the individual
and his society, and it has noted the learning efficiency of
the abilities and skills. But common observation would in-
dicate that individuals in general tend to avoid real problem
solving, When presented with problems, they usually apply
a limited stock of techniques to them and are frequently
satisfied if a partial solution is obtained. If the techniques
8 Freud, H., and Cheronis, N. D., "Retention in the
Physical Science Survey Course, " Journal of Chemical
Education, 17 (1940), pp. 289-93.
9 Frutchey, F. P., "Retention in High School Chem-
istry," Journal of Higher Education, 8 (1937), pp. 217-18.
lO Tyler, R. W., "Permanence of Learning," in Con-
structing Achievement Tests, Columbus: Ohio State Uni-
versity, 1934.
43

do not work, there is a strong tendency either to reorder


the prob.lern completely (that is, to make it a new prob.lern)
or to escape from it entirely. Rare.ly do individua.ls stay
with a difficult prob.lern for any considera..ble length of time
and try increasingly varied procedures for attacking it.
Yet, we need more than ever to help students develop
problem-solving methods which will yield more complete
and adequate solutions in a wide range of problem situa-
tions. lt is tobe hoped that the taxonomy's analysis of this
area willfacilitatc the exploration of newmethods ofteach-
ing for high-level prob.lern solving and assist in eva.luating
these methods.
CHAPTER 3

THE PROBLEMS OF CLASSIFYING


EDUCA TIONAL OBJECTIVES
AND TEST EXERCISES

Three levels of definition in each taxonomy category

The taxonomy Handbook in its present form defines a


class or sub-class of educational objectives in three ways.
The first and major type of definition is represented by a
verbal description or definition of each class and sub-class.
The exact phrasing of these definitions has been the subject
of much debate among us and, while the present definitions
are far from ideal, every effort has been made to describe
the major aspects of each category as carefully as possible.

A second type of definition is provided by the list of


educational objectives which are included under each sub-
class of the taxonomy. The objectives used here have been
selected from the published literature on curriculum and
testing as weil as from unpublished materials available in
the files of the examiners and curriculum specialists. In
a number of cases, the objectives have been slightly modi-
fied in order to more precisely express the student behav-
ior intended. Most of the objectives listed in this Handbook
have been selected from courses and programs at the gen-
eral education and secondary education levels. While some
attempt has been made to select objectives from different
subject fields, it is likely that each subject is not equally
well represented in these .lists. Inclusion of an objective
in this vo.lume does not mean that we believe it is an im-
portant objective or even that it is the best way of formu-
lating such an objective. We do believe that the objectives
finally included are representative of those found in the
literature and that they are appropriately classified.
The third type of definition attempts to make clear the
behavior appropriate to each category by illustrations of
the examination questions and problems which are regarded
as appropriate. In a way, this represents the most detailed
and precise definition of the sub-class since it indicates

44
45

the tasks the student is expected to pert"orm and the speci-


fic behavior he is expected to exhibit. The illustrative test
exercises inc.luded in this Handbook have been selected
frmn published examinations as well as from examinations
available in the files of the cooperating examiners. While
some effort has been made to draw these examples from
the different subject fields and from secondary as well as
college courses, it is likely that particular areas and
particular levels are not as fully illustrated as desirable.
The reader· will note the high proportion of so called ''ob-
jective" or recognition forms of test questions. This does
not ref.lect a bias against carefully devised essay or other
types of test situations. We have made use of illustrations
which were readily available and selected examples which
most clearly illustrated the category.

In order to help the reader get an over-all view of the


taxonomy and to help him in its use, we have printed a
c;:ondensed version of the taxonomy in the Appendix. Each
of the classes of objectives is defined in greater detail in
the appropriate section of this volume where it is accom-
panied by a discussion of the particular objectives and test
illustrations which are relevant.
The classification of objectives

Tohelp the reader in making use of the taxonomy, this


chapter is devoted to a discussion of the problems of c.las-
sifying educational objectives and test exercises. A num-
ber of illustrative objectives and test exercises are provided
for the reader to classify for himself. He can then compare
his classification with those made by the writers. The in-
tent of this chapter is thus to bring the reader c.loser to the
taxonomy and to convert it from an empty set of terms and
definitions to one that the reader finds workab.le and appli-
cable to his own situation.

We begin by selecting three objectives from Volume I


of Higher Education for American Democracy 1 which ap-
pear tobe relevant to the cognitive domain of the taxonomy.

1A Report of the President•s Commission on Higher


Education. Higher Education for American Democracy,
Volume I, Establishing the Goals. U. S. Government
Printing Office, Washington, December, 1947.
46
( A) to understand the ideas of others and to
express one's own effectively (p. 52)
( B) to acquire the knowledge {and attitudes) basic
to a satisfying family life (p. 56)

( C) to acquire and use the skills and habits involved


in critical and constructive thinking {p. 57)

All three of these would appear to represent desirable out-


comes of learning. However, they a.re such broad objec-
tives that the kinds of learning experiences which might be
appropriate are far from clear. At this level of generality
one would also have great difficulty in determining the types
of evaluation evidence which could reveal whether or not
students have actua.lly developed the necessary competence.
As they are stated, these broad objectives could only be
classified under such broad categories as knowledge or
intellectual abilities. Thus, objective A includes both un-
derstanding of ideas and (the ability) to express ideas effec-
tively. At this level of generality the objective could be
included under each of the six major categories of this tax-
onomy. Objective C quite clearly goes beyond the knowl-
edge category, but it could quite properly be included under
each of the remaining five categories of Comprehension,
Application, Analysis, Synthesis, and Evaluation. Objec-
tive B includes both knowledge and attitudes. However, if
only the knowledge aspect of this objective is considered,
it could quite properly be classified under category 1. 00
of this taxonomy-Knowledge. lt is, however, impossible
to determine which of the different subclasses of knowledge
are appropriate.
The user of the taxonomy will find that, all too fre-
quently, educationa.l objectives are stated so broadly that
little can be done with them for curricular or evaluation
purposes until they have been more adequately defined. As
broad outcomes they are extremely useful in suggesting
genera.l policy for a particular educational institution, for a
group of institutions, or for a type of educational program.
And, in fact, this level of genera.lity is typical of college
cata.logs and the printed statements of aims of secondary
schools. The majority of publications in which some educa-
tional policy group or general curriculum group attempts to
define or suggest the desired outcomes of education are
couched in terms equally broad. When faculty groups first
47
begin to state their educational objectives they tend to make
use of aims stated as generally as those found in the report
of the President's Commission on Higher Education. Al-
though the taxonomy is not too useful in classifying such
broadly stated outcomes of learning, it is useful in helping
to determine the level of specificity at which. statements of
objectives can be utilized in planning learning experiences
and suggesting types of evaluation evidence which might be
appropriate. The taxonomy is also useful as a means of
raising questions which can have the effect of more clearly
defining such generalized outcomes. All this is to say that
the reader should not be overly frustrated at encountering
and attempting to deal with educational objectives which are
so broad that little can be done with them as far as classi-
fication is concerned. He should also recognize that at this
level of generality little can be done with them as far as
specific problems of curriculum and evaluation are concern-
ed. Nevertheless, it is repeated that such broad aims are
useful in pointing up general policy and directions for cur-
riculum development.

A somewhat more clearly defined set of educational


objectives for purposes of illustration is offered by the
report "A Design for General Education. " 2 This report,
like the President's Commission report on Higher Educa-
tion, has a list of broad outcomes of general education.
Three of them which are parallel to those reported on
page 46 are:

(D) to communicate through his own language in writing


and speaking at the level of expression adequate to
the needs of educated people (p. 14)

(E) to think through the problems and to gain the basic


orientation that will better enable him to make a
satisfactory family and marital adjustment (p. 14)

(F) to act in the light of an understanding of the natural


phenomena in his environment in its implications for

2 American Council on Education Studies. 11 A Design


for General Education, " American Council on Education,
Washington, June 1944.
48
human society and human welfare, to use scientific
methods in the solution of his problems, and to em-
ploy useful nonverbal methods of thought and com -
munication (p. 14)

These are obviously too broad to classify with any precision


in the taxonomy. However, in addition to these broad out-
comes, the Design includes over 200 objectives which are
more clearly defined in terms of student behavior and sub-
ject matter con.tent. These more specifk objectives are
grouped under ten broad outcomes. The specific objec-
tives can be classified with some precision under the appro-
priate categories and sub-categories of the cognitive domain.
Five of these are selected for purposes of discussion.

(G) (Knowledge and understanding) of reliable


sources of information on health (p. 31)

Although the full intent of the word 1kderstanding 1 is not


clear, the emphasis on knowing, and possibly remembering,
places this objective rather clearly under the general head-
ing of 1. 00 Knowledge. Since the emphasis appears tobe on
the knowledge of reliable sources rather than on the ability
to locate new sources or the ability to analyze the accuracy
and reliability of sources, this objective is classifiable as
1. 12 Knowledge of specific facts.

(H) To read significant writings with critical


comprehension (p. 34)
Although the full intent of the word "critical" is not
clear, the emphasis on reading and comprehension suggests
that this objective is appropriately classified under the major
category, 2. 00 Comprehension. Although a case could be
made for including this objective under 2. 10 Translation or
2. 30 Extrapolation, it is likely that the objective is more
accurately classified as 2. 20 Interpretation, since this is
the sub-category of Comprehension which emphasizes the
grasping of the meaning of a written work.

(I) The ability to apply principles to new


situations (p. 43)

This objective is described in such a way as to apply


most directly to category 3. 00 Application.
49

(J) The ability to recognize form and pattern in


literary works as a means of understanding
their meaning (p. 44)

This objective apparently involves a competence in ana-


lyzing the organization of a literary work to determine its
formal and structural characteristics. This type of skill is
included under the category 4. 00 Analysis. Since it can be
defined as involving an analysis of the structure and organi-
zation of a commun.i.cation., it i.s appropri.a.tely i::J.assifi.ed
under 4. 30 Analysis of organizational principles.

(K) The ability to select and organize ideas and


experiences with reference to socially de-
sirable purposes of communication (p. 33)

In this objective the emphasis appears tobe on the put-


ting together of elements and parts so as to forma whole.
As such it would be an example of what we have termed
5. 00 Synthesis. lt can further be defined as the first sub-
category of synthesis, 5. 10 Production of a unique commu-
nication, since for the individual writer or speaker the em-
phasis is an the communication, rather than on the other
types of synthesis defined under this major category.

(L) The ability to identify and appraise judgments


and values that are involved in the choice of a
course of action (p. 41)

The identification of the judgments and values involved


in the choice of a course of action suggests a type of com-
prehension or analysis. However, the appraisal of the
judgment and values represents a kind of evaluation. The
rule we have adopted is to place the objective under the high-
est type of classification (the most complex) which is appro-
priate. Therefore, this objective would be classified as
6. 00 Evaluation. Since the evaluation of judgments and
values must, if it is tobe based on cognitive grounds, refer
to some sort of external criteria, the appropriate classifica-
tion of this objective is 6. 20 Judgments in terms of external
criteria.
50
Test yourself on the classification of objectives

The reader may wish to try his hand at classifying other


objectives under the categories of the condensed version of
the taxonomy in the Appendix. For this purpose the follow-
inglO objectives have been selected from "A Design for Gen-
eral Education. 11 The Key to the classification of each of
these objectives will be found on page 59.

1. (Knowledge) of community organizations and services


for health maintenance and improvement (p. 31)

2. (Knowledge) of acceptable usage in articulation, pro-


nunciation, capita.lization, grammar, and spelling as
a means of effective presentation (p. 33)

3. (Ability) to listen to important oral statements with


concentration and judgment (p. 34)

4.. (Knowledge) of the criteria of normal and neurotic


adjustment (p. 35)

5. (Knowledge) of the trends in American society affect-


ing the structure and functions of the family and the
role of warnen and children in our society (p. 36)

6. The ability to read graphs, diagrams, and blueprints


(p. 43)

7. (Knowledge) of the techniques and methods used by


scientists in seeking to answer questions about the
world, and of the proper functions of scientific theory
and experiment (p. 42)

8, The ability to recognize artistic quality in contempo-


rary works of music and art (p. 45)

9. The ability to formulate explicitly and systematically


a pattern of values as a basis of individual and social
action (p. 41)

10. The ability to evaluate popular health beliefs criti-


cally (p. 32)
51

The problems of classifying test exercises

The task of classifying test exercises is somewhat more


complicated than that of classifying educational objectives.
Before the reader can classify a particular test exercise
he must know, or at least make some assumptions about,
the learning situations which have preceded the test. He
must also actually attempt to solve the test problem and
note the mental processes he utilizes. The reader should
also take into consideration the possibility that the proces-
ses used in selecting the correct answer in a recognition
form of question may be somewhat different from those used
in considering the incorrect alternatives in the same ques -
tion. For purposes of illustration we have selected a series
of test exercises from the book, The Measurement of Under-
standing. 3

( I) As the number of mechanical inventions increases and


society becomes more complex: (1) Each worker does more
specialized work. (2) Each person takes care directly of
more of his needs. (3) People depend less on each other.
(4) Each worker does a greater variety of work. (p. 88)

lt is assumed that the student has had learning experi-


ences which stress specialization of function with increas-
ing industrialization and complexity of the society. Although
the particular formulation of the test, item may be new,
the concept of specialization is familiar. With this assump-
tion, the item is clearly classified under 1. 00 Knowledge.
Since the emphasis is on a generalized concept rather than
particular concrete facts, it is appropriate to further clas-
sify it under the sub-category 1. 31 Knowledge of principles
and generalizations.

(II) From which could you obtain inforrnation concerning


the location of the principal oil fields of the United States?
(1) Department of State (2) Department of Interior (3) De-
partment of Education (4) Department of Agriculture (p. 91)

3 Brownell, William A., Chairman, et al. The Meas -


urement of Understanding, The Forty-fifth Yearbook of the
National Society for the Studyof Education, Part I, Chicago:
The University of Chicago Press, March 1946.
52

lt is assumed that the student has learned about the


functions of the different departments and that he has
learned about the types of publications and kinds of informa -
tion one might in general secure from each department.
This would then be readily classified under 1. 00 Knowledge.
Since what is asked for is a relatively detailed bit of infor-
mation, it would be further classified as 1. 12 Knowledge of
specific facts.

( III ) The underlined s ta.tement at the end of the prob lern


is assumed to be a correct answer. You are to explain the
underlined conclusion by selecting statements from the list
following the problem. (The student checks the explanations .)

If a person is planning to bathe in the sun, at what time of


day is he most likely to receive a severe sunburn? He is
most likely to receive ~ severe sunburn in the middle of
the day (11 A.M. to 1 P.M.) because:

We are slightly closer to the sun at noon than in the


-- morning or afternoon.
The noon sun will produce more "burn" than the
morning or afternoon sun.
When the sun's rays fall directly (straight down) on a
- - surface, more energy is received by that surface
than when the rays fall obliquely on the surface.
When the sun's rays fall directly (straight down) on a
- - surface, less sunshine is reflected from the surface
than when the sun's rays fall obliquely on that surface.
When the sun is directly overhead the sun's rays pass
- - through less absorbing atmosphere than when the sun
is .lower in the sky.
_ _ Just as a bullet shot straight into a block of wood pene-
trates farther into the wood, so will the direct rays
at noon penetrate more deeply into the skin.
The air is usually warmer at noon than at other
- - times of the day.
The ultraviolet of the sunlight is mainly responsible
- - for sunburn. (114)

lt is assumed that this is a new problem for the student


and that the task is one of selecting the correct explanatory
principle. Some of the alternatives offered are factually
correct while others are incorrect. Same are relevant,
53

others are irrelevant. Some merely repeat the conclusion,


while others state the generalizations or principles which
have explanatory value, Selecting the appropriate explana-
tory generalizations requires that the student be able to re-
late the appropriate generalizations to the situation. This
would then be classified as 3. 00 Application.

(IV) Statement of facts:


Per Cent of Family Members
Who Received No Medical
Family Income Attention During the Year
Under $1200 • • 47
$1200 to $3000 •• 40
$3000 to $5000 • 33
$5000 to $10, 000 • 24
Over $10, 000 • 14

Conclusion: Members of families with small incomes are


healthier than members with large incomes.

The conc.lusion is not completely justified by the facts


given, lt may be justified, however, if an assumption is
made; that is, if a factor not stated in the given facts is tak-
en for granted. What is this factor? That is, what must be
assumed in addition to the facts given in order that the con-
clusion be true? (p. 127)

If it is assumed that the data and the problem are essen-


tially new to the student, it requires that the student be ab.le
to identify the assumption which must be made to support
the conclusion in relation to the data. lt is thus an example
of 4. 10 Analysis of elements.

( V) A 6A class was studying the geographyof Europe and


the land of the Dutch people, Someone in the class said
that the homes of the Dutch people who live in America are
always neat and clean. The teacher asked this question,
"What reasons can you give for thinking that they are al-
ways neat and clean?"
54
Here are some of the reasons the children gave. Read
them carefully and decide which are the best and which are
the paarest_
I heard someone say that they were neat and clean.
I was in one Dutch home and it was clean.
Our geography book said they were clean.
I have been in many Dutch homes and all of them
were neat and clean.
I read in the story book that these houses were
always neat and clean. (p. 93)

Here the student is expected to judge the value of reasons


in relation to a new question which is posed in the problem.
lt is clearly an example of 6. 00 Evaluation. Since the em-
phasis is on quality of evidence in relation to the sources
and the comprehensiveness of the information it could appro-
priately be placed under the sub-category of 6. 20 Judgments
in terms of external criteria.

Test yourself on the c.lassification of test exercises

The reader may now wish to try his hand at classifying


additional test exercises. The following exercises have
been selected from the book, Measurement of Understanding.
The key to the classification of these exercises will be found
on page 59.

In the following prob.lern, assume that the student has


studied tariffs in some detail.

1. Which has been a result of this country's policy of


maintaining a high protective tariff? (1) Higher prices for
domestic ;:;oods (2) lower prices for foreign goods (3) in-
creased foreign trade (4) higher prices for farm products
sold in foreign markets (p. 88)
Assume that the data in the following exercise are new to the student.

The table below shows the combined expenditures of all state governments in the United
States for various governmental services. Amounts are in thousands of dollars.

1910 1920 1930


Per Per Per
cent cent cent
Amount of Amount of Amount of
total totaJ to•"l
1. General govern-
ment expenses $ 43,400 11.7 $ 74,053 10.5 $ 125,000 9.1
2. Protection 19,425 5.3 32,000 4.6 72,000 5.4
3. Health 20,302 5.4 28,475 4.2 41,450 3.1
4. Recreation 2,162 0.5 4,820 0.6 9_. 512 0.7
5. Highways 58,300 15.9 125,400 18.2 292,441 21. 3
6. Welfare 86,621 23.4 121,850 17.6 214,500 15.1
7. Education 148,265 37.8 315,122 44.3 591,240 45.3
$378,475 100. 0 $701,720 100. 0 $1,346,143 100.0

tJl
tJl
56

For the purpose of checking the statements at the end of this


problem, the data alone:
(1) are sufficient to make the statement true.
(2) are sufficient to indicate that the statement is probably
true.
(3) are not sufficient to indicate whether there is any degree
of truth or falsity in the statement.
(4) are sufficient to indicate that the statement is probably
false.
(5) are sufficient to make the statement false,

Mark each of the following statements with the number of


one of the foregoing statements which indicates your inter-
pretation of the data in the table.

2. In 1935 less was spent for general government ex-


penses than for highways.
3. The highway expenditures of New York, Ohio, and
Illinois together were at least twice as large in
1930 as in 1910.
4. In 1930 more than five times as much money was
spent for highways as for health.
5. In 1929 at least 35 per cent of the total expenditures
of the states was for education.
6. The expenditures for each type of service shown in
- - the table increased between 1910 and 1930. (p. 94)

Assume that the student has learned something about mete-


orology, but that the particular relationships between the
fact and the statements have not been studied in this form.

7. Tell whether each of the statements following the fact is


(A) a cause of the fact, (B) a result of the fact, or (C) not
related to the fact.
Fact: A flash of lightning occurs.
Statements
A roar of thunder can be heard.
Electricity passed between clouds and the earth.
lt is dangerous to stand under a tree during a
rainstorm. (p. 135)
57

Some additional test exercises drawn from the files of the


cooperating examiners are presented below.

8. A brick can be pulled along a fairly smooth surface by


means of a string; the string would break, however, if
jerked sharply. Which of the following principles is
most directly useful in explaining this fact?

A- Force is equal to mass times acceleration.


B- Friction exists between any two bodies in contact
with each other.
C- Conservation of momentum
0- Conservation of energy
E- None of these principles applies.

"For what men say is that, if I am really just and am not


also thought just, profit there is none, but the pain and loss
on the other hand are unmistakable. But if, though unjust,
I acquire the reputation of justice, a heavenly life is prom-
ised to me. Since then appearance tyrannizes over truth
and is lord of happiness, to appearance I must devote my-
self. I will describe around me a picture and shadow of
virtue to be the vestibule and exterior of my house; behind
I will trail the subtle and crafty fox. 11

9. Which one of the following best expresses the main


topic of this selection?
A- What is justice?
B- How to attain eternal life
C- How to be successful
0- What is the nature of virtue ?
E- What is truth?

10. Which of the following might be most inclined to follow


the policy recommended in the selection?
A- An absolute ruler
B- A politician
C- A philosopher
0- A statesman
E- A religious leader
58

11. If some external force should shüt the earth nearer the
sun so that the mean radius of its orbit would be eighty
million miles, the anticipated effect.on the earth would
cause the
A- seasons to be longer.
B- sidereal day to be longer.
C- average yearly temperature to be lower.
D- year to be shorter.
E- None of these.

12. Which one of the following actions would probably be


least effective in correcting the undesirable features
of group political pressures?
A- Overhaul the national patent system.
B- Concentrate the economic power of the nation.
C- Give the public more information about the
origin and extent of political lobbying.
D- Use congressional investigating committees.
E- Encourage all groups to subordinate their
interests to the national interest.

13. ::;et the following poem to music:

- - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - ~ - - by_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(Copy furnished the student)

Write a simple melodic line.


Write a composition with a single tonal base.
Write a composition using two tonal levels.
Write a specific work in a larger form for any of the accepted
mediums of expression such as a chamber group, orches-
tra, chorus, or piano. The composition should be at least
ten minutes' duration and have received performance. Sug-
gested designs are as follows: a string quartet, a trio, or a
sonata for violin or violincello and piano, or a work for full
orchestra, or a dramatic work or a cantata for solos, chorus,
and orchestra of at least fifteen minutes I duration, (Thesis
requirement for master 1s degree in music.)
59

Key to the Classification


of Educational Objectives

Objective Classification

1 1.12
2 1. 21
3 2. 00, and perhaps 2. 20
4 1,24
5 • 1. 22
6 2.10
7 1.25
8 4,30 or 6.20
9 • 5.20
10 6,20

Key to the Classification


of Test Exercises

Test
Exercise Classification

1 1.22
2 2,30
3 2.30
4 2.10
5 2.30
6 2.10
7 4.20
8 1. 31
9 2.20
10 2.30
11 3.00
12 • 6.20
13 5.10
PART II

THE TAXONOMY

AND

ILLUSTRATIVE MATERIALS
1. 00 KNOWLEDGE

Knowledge as defined here includes those behaviors and


test situations which emphasize the remembering, either by
recognition or recall, of ideas, material, or phenomena.
The behavior expected of a student in the recall Situation is
very similar to the behavior he was expected to have during
the original learning situation. In the learning situation the
student is expected to store in his mind certain information,
and the behavior expected later is the remembering of this
information. Although some alterations may be expected in
the material to be remembered, this is a relatively minor
part of the knowledge behavior or test. The process of re-
lating and judging is also involved to the extent that the stu-
dent is expected to answer questions or problems which are
posed in a different form in the test situation than in the
original learning Situation.

In the classification of the knowledge objectives, the ar-


rangement is from the specific and relatively concrete types
of behaviors to the more complex and abstract ones. Thus,
the knowledge of specifics refers to types of information or
knowledge which can be isolated and remembered separately,
while the knowledge of universals and abstractions empha-
sizes the interrelations and patterns in which information can
be organized and structured.

While it is recognized that knowledge is involved in the


more complex major categories of the taxonomy (2. 00 to
6. 00), the knowledge category differs from the others in that
remembering 'is the major psychological process involved
here, while in the other categories the remembering is only
one part of a much more complex process of relating, judg-
ing, and reorganizing.

62
63

1. 10 KNOWLEDGE OF SPECIFICS

The recall of specific and isolable bits of information. --


This refers primarily to what might be called the hard core
of facts or information in each field of knowledge. Such in-
formation represents the elements the specialist must use in
communicating about his field, in understanding it, and in or-
ga.nizing it systematically. These specifics are usually quite
serviceable to people working in the field in the very form
in which they are presented and need little or no alteration
from one use or application to another. Such specifics also
become the basic elements the student or learner must know
if he is to be acquainted with the field or to solve any of the
problems in it. These specifics usually are symbols which
have some concrete referents and are, for the most part, at
a relatively low level of abstraction. There is a tremendous
wea.lth of these specifics and there must always be some se-
lection for educational purposes, since it is almost inconceiv-
able that a student can learn all of the specifics relevant to a
particular field. As our knowledge in the socia.l sciences,
the sciences, and the humanities increases, even the special-
ist has great difficu.lty in keeping up with all the new specifics
found or developed in the field. For classification purposes,
the specifics may be distinguished from the more complex
classes of knowledge by virtue of their very specificity, that
is, they can be isolated as elements or bits which h.ave some
meaning and value by themselves.

1. 11 - Knowledge of terminology

Knowledge of the referents for specific verbal and non-


verbal symbols. - - This may include knowledge of the most
generally accepted symbol referent, knowledge of the variety
of symbols which may be used for a single referent, or knowl-
edge of the referent most appropriate to a given use of a sym-
bol.

Probably the most basic type of knowledge in a particular


64

field is its terminology. Each field contains a !arge number


of symbols, either verbal or non-verbal, which have partic-
ular referents. These represent the basic language of the
field- -the shorthand used by the workers in a field to express
what they know. In any attempt by workers to communicate
with others about phenomena within the field, they find it nec -
essary to make use of some of the special symbols and terms
they have devised. In many cases it is impossible for them
to discuss problems in their field without making use of some
of the essential terms of that field.. Qui.te Hterally, they are
unable to even think about many of the phenomena in the field
unless they make use of theseterms and symbols. The learner
must become cognizant of these terms and symbols and must
learn the generally accepted definitions or meanings to be at-
tached. Just as the specialist in the field must communicate
by the use of these terms, so the learner or the individual
reader of the communication must have a knowledge of the
symbols and their referents before he can comprehend or
think about the phenomena of the field.

Here, to a larger extent than in any of the other classes


of knowledge objectives, there is a likelihood that the spe-
cialist, finding his own symbols useful and precise, will
attempt to impose upon the learner a !arger number of the
symbols than the learner really needs, can learn, or will re-
tain. Especially is this true in many of the sciences which
attempt to use words and symbols with great precision and
where the specialist finds it difficult to express the same
ideas or discuss particular phenomena by the use of other
symbols or by the use of other terms much more common
to a lay population.

1.11 Knowledge of Terminology--Illustrative Educational


Objectives

To define technical terms by giving their attributes,


properties, or relations.

The ability to distinguish the referents for words and to


establish the limits within which a biological term may
have meaning.

Familiarity with a !arge number of words in their com -


mon range of meanings.
65
Knowledge of the vocabulary of the fine arts sufficient
tobe able to read and converse intell.igently.

To acquire an understanding of the vocabulary used in


quantitative thinking.

Knowledge of the terms and concepts peculiar to work


in science.

Knowledge of important accounting terms.

Mastery of the terms peculiar to work in science.

To acquire an understanding of the terminology associ-


ated with geometric figures on a plane.

1. 12 - Knowledge of Specific Facts

Knowledge of dates, events, persons, places, sources


of information, etc. -- This may include very precise and spe-
cific information, such as the exact date of an event or the
exact magnitude of a phenomenon. lt may also include ap-
proximate information, such as a time period in which an
event occurred or the general order of magnitude of a phenom-
enon. Knowledge of specific facts refers to those facts which
can be isolated as separate, discrete elements in contrast to
those which can only be known in a larger context.

In every field there are a large number of dates, events,


persons, places, findings, etc., known by the specialist
which represent findings or knowledge about the field. These
can be distinguished from the terminology in that the termi-
nology generally represents the conventions or agreements
within a field, while the facts are more likely to represent
the findings which can be tested by other means than deter-
mining the unanimity of workers in the field or the agreements
they have made for purposes of communication. Such specific
facts also represent basic elements which the specialist must
use in presenting communications about the field and in think-
ing about specific problems or topics in the field. lt should
also be recognized that this classification includes knowledge
about particular books, writing, and sources of information
on specific topics and problems. Thus, knowledge of a spe-
cific fact as well as knowledge of the source which deals with
the fact are both classifiable under this heading.
66

Again, there is usually a tremendous number of such


specific facts and the teacher or curriculum specialist must
make choices as to what is basic and what is only of second-
ary importance or of importance primarily to the specialist.
The teacher is also confronted with the problem of leve.l of
precision with which different information must be known.
Thus, quite frequent.ly he may be content to have a student
.learn only the approximate magnitude of the phenomenon
rather than its precise quantity or to learn an approximate
time period rather than the precise date or time of a specific
event. The teacher also has a considerab.le problem in
determining whether many of the specific facts are such that
the student can .learn them whenever he really needs them,
or whether they should be learned during and as part of an
educational unit or course.

1. 12 Knowledge of Specific Facts--11.lustrative Educational


Objectives

The recall of major facts about particu.lar cultures.

The possession of a minimum knowledge about the or-


ganisms studied in the laboratory.

Knowledge of biological facts important to a systematic


understanding of biological processes.

Recall and recognition of factual information about con-


temporary society.

Knowledge of practical biological facts important to


health, citizenship, and other human needs.

Acquiring information about major natural resources.

Acquiring information about various important aspects


of nutrition.

Recall and recognition of what is characteristic of par-


ticular periods.

Knowledge of physical and chemical properties of common


elements and their compounds.
67

An acquaintance with the more significant names,


places, and events in the news.

A knowledge of the reputation of a given author for pre-


senting and interpreting facts on governmental prob-
lems.

Knowledge of reliable sources of information for


wise purchasing.
68

1. 20 KNOWLEDGE OF WAYS AND MEANS


OF DEALING WITH SPECIFICS

Knowledge of the ways of organizing, studying, judging,


and criticizing ideas and phenomena. --This includes the
methods of inquiry, the chronological sequences, and the
standards of judgment within a field as well as the patterns
of organization through which the areas of the fields them-
selves are determined and internally organized.

At a somewhat more abstract level than the specifics


are the methods of organizing and dealing with them. Each
subject field has a body of techniques, criteria, classifica-
tions, and forms which are used to discover specifics as
well as to deal with them once they are discovered. These
differ from the specifics in that they form the connecting
links between specifics, the operations necessary to estab-
lish or deal with specifics, and the criteria by which specif-
ics are judged and evaluated. lt must be made clear that
this class of behaviors is only a very limited one as used
here. lt does not involve actual use of the ways and means
so much as it does a knowledge of their existence and possi-
ble use. The actual skills and abilities which involve their
use are described in the 2. 00 to 6. 00 classes of the taxon-
omy.

Although it will frequently be found difficult to distin-


guish knowledge of ways and means from knowledge of spe-
cifics for purposes of classification, several characteristics
will be useful in making these distinctions. Ways and means
will refer to processes rather than products. They will in-
dicate operations rather than the results of operations. They
will include knowledge which is largely the result of agree-
ment and convenience rather than the knowledge which is
more directly a matter of observation, experimentation, and
discovery. They will more commonly be reflections of how
workers in the field think and attack problems rather than
the results of such thought or problem solving.

Although this class does not differ greatly from 1. 10 -


Know.ledge of Specifics, it appears likely that students will
have greater difficulty in learning this knowledge because of
its greater abstractness. Added difficulty may occur be-
cause many of the ways and means may represent relatively
69
arbitrary and even artificial forms which are meaningful
only to the specialist who recognizes their value as tools
and techniques in his work.

1. 21 - Knowledge of Conventions

Knowledge of characteristic ways of treating and pre-


senting ideas and phenomena. - These are the usages,
styles, and practices which are employed in a field because
the workers find they suit their purposes or hecause they
appear to suit the phenomena with which they deal. This
may include such varied phenomena as conventional sym-
bols used in map making and dictionaries, rules of social
behavior, and rules, sty.les, or practices commonly em-
ployed in scholarly fie.lds.

There are many conventions and rules which the work-


ers in a fie.ld find extreme.ly useful in dealing with the phe-
nomena of a field. Although many such conventions may be
retained because of habit and tradition rather than useful-
ness, at some point in time they were found to be especially
significant in giving some structure to the phenomena. Gen-
erally these conventions will have an arbitrary existence
since they were developed or retained because of general
agreement or concurrence of workers in the field. They are
usually true only as a matter of definition and practice rath-
er than as a result of discovery or observation.

In some fields these conventions make up the largest


proportion of the knowledge of the field. lt is likely that
students are more willing to accept and learn this type of
knowledge in the early school years than in the later years
of formal education.

l. 21 Knowledge of Conventions--lllustrative Educational


Objectives

Familiarity with the forms and conventions of th'e major


types of works, e. g., verse, plays, scientific papers,
etc.

To make pupils conscious of correct form and usage in


speech and writing.

Knowledge of common rules of etiquette.


70

To develop a knowledge of acceptable forms of language.

Knowledge of the ways in which symbols are used to in-


dicate the correct pronunciation of words.

Knowledge of the standard representational devices and


symbols in maps and charts.

A knowledge of the rules of punctuation.

1. 22 - Knowledge of Trends and Sequences

Knowledge of the processes, directions, and movements


of phenomena with respect to time. --lt includes trends as at-
tempts to point up the interrelationship among a numl:er of
specific events which are separated by time. lt also includes
representations of processes which may involve time as well
as causal interrelations of a series of specific events. Out
of an almost infinite number of specific events, particular
workers have selected those which they believe point to a
trend or sequence. In this respect trends andsequences are
those relationships and processes which have been selected
or emphasized by the workers in the field. Many of the
trends and sequences are difficult to communicate because
they invo.lve highly dynamic actions, processes, and move-
ments which are not fully represented by static verbal,
graphic, or symbolic forms.

Students may have difficu.lty in learning trends and se-


quences unless they are also familiar with the specifics on
which such trends and sequences are based.

1. 22 Knowledge of Trends and Sequences--lllustrative Edu-


cational Objectives

Understanding of the continuity and development of


American cu.lture as exemplified in American life.

Knowledge of the basic trends underlying the development


of public assistance programs with particu.lar reference
to such programs as WPA, PWA, etc., deve.loped during
the depression.

Knowledge of trends in government in the United States


during the last fifty years.
71

To develop a basic knowledge of the evolutionary devel-


opment of man.

To develop a knowledge of effects of industrialization on


the culture and international relations of a nation.

To know and describe the forces which determine and


shape public policies.

To understand the .i!'.creasing impo!'tance of r,(!.mini.st-r;:,.-


tive departments of the national government in formulat-
ing public policies.

To know how Greek civilization has affected the con-


temporary world.

To know how militarism and imperialism have been of


causal importance for the world wctrs.

To develop a knowledge of how hereditary and environ-


mental factors interrelate to influence the development
of the individual.

A knowledge of the forces, past and present, which have


made for the increasing interdependence of people all
over the world.

1. 23 - Knowledge of Classifications and Categories

Knowledge of the classes, sets, divisions, and arrarge-


ments which are regarded as fundamental or useful for a
given subject field, purpose, argumm.t, or problem. --As a
'Subject field, problem, or topic becomes well developed,
individuals working on it find it useful to develop classifi-
cations and categories which help to structure and systema-
tize the phenomena. These classifications and categories
are likely to have an arbitrary and artificial flavor to the stu-
dent, although the specialist find3 them useful and even funda-
mental for his work. The individual student is expected to
know these classifications and to know when they are appro-
priate. However, under the present heading is included only
knowledge of the classifications and categories, while the ap-
plication of these to new problems is dealt with in other parts
of the taxonomy.
72

1. 23 Knowledge of Classification and Categories--lllustra-


tive Educational Objectives

To recognize the area encompassed by various kinds of


problems or materials.

Becoming familiar with a range of types of literature.

Knowledge of the features of various forms of business


ownership.

1. 24 - Knowledge of Criteria

Knowledge of the criteria by which facts, principles,


opinions, and conduct are tested or judged. -- Here again is a
systematization which is found useful by workers attacking
the problems of a field. Students may be expected to make
use of the criteria as well as to have a knowledge of them.
The utilization of the criteria in actual problem situations
will be found in 6. 00 - Evaluation. The criteria will vary
markedly from field to field. They are likely to appear com-
plex and abstract to students and to acquire meaning only as
they are related to concrete situations and problems.
73

1. 24 Knowledge of Criteria--lllustrative Educational Ob-


jectives

Familiarity with criteria for judgment appropriate to


the type of work and the purpose for which it is read.

Knowledge of criteria for the evaluation of recreational


activities.

Knowledge uf the criteria by which a valid source of


information in the social sciences can be recognized.

Knowledge of the criteria by which the nutritive value


of a meal can be judged.

Knowledge of the basic elements (balance, unity, rhythm,


etc.) which can be used to judge a work of art.

Knowledge of the criteria by which home economists


judge the relative proportions of income distributed
for different purposes by a family.

1. 25 - Knowledge of Methodology

Knowledge of the methods of inquiry, technigues, and


procedures employed in a particular subject field as well
as those employed in investigating particular problems and
phenomena. --Here, again, the emphasis is on the individ-
ual's knowledge of the methods rather than on his ability to
use the methods in the ways defined by categories 3. 00 to
6. 00. However, the student is frequently required to know
about methods and techniques and to know the ways in which
they have been used. Such knowledge is most nearly of an
historical or encyclopedic type. This knowledge, although
simpler and perhaps less functional than the ability to actu-
ally employ the methods and techniques, is an important pre-
lude to such use. Thus before engaging in an inqui:ry the stu-
dent may be expected to know about the methods and tech-
niques which have been employed in similar inquiries. At a
later stage in his inquiry he may be expected to show rela-
tions between the methods he has employed and the methods
employed by others.
74

1. 25 Knowledge of Methodology- -Illustrative Educational


Objectives

The student shall know the methods of attack relevant


to the kinds of problems of concern to the social sci-
ences.

Knowledge of scientific methods for evaluating health


concepts.

Knowledge of the techniques and methods used by sci-


entists in seeking to answer questions about the world.
75

1. 30 KNOWLEDGE OF THE UNIVERSALS


AND ABSTRACTIONS IN A FIELD

Knowledge of the major ideas, schemes, and patterns


by which phenomena and ideas are organized. --These are
the large structures, theories, and generalizations which
dominate a subject field or which are quite generally used
in studying phenomena or solving problems. These are at
the highest levels of abstraction and complexity.

These concepts bring together a large number of specific


facts and events, describe the processes and interrela-
tions among these specifics, and thus enable the worker to
organize the whole in a parsimonious form.

These tend to be very broad ideas and plans which are


rathEr difficult for students to comprehend. Quite frequently
they are so difficult because the student is not thoroughly ac-
quainted with the phenomena the universals are intended to
summarize and organize. If the student does get to know
them, however, he has a means of relating and organizing a
great deal of subject matter and as a result should have more
insight into the field as well as greater retentiveness for it.

1. 31 - Knowledge of Principles and Generalizations

Knowledge of particular abstractions which summarize


observations of phenomena. --These are the abstractions
which are of greatest value in explaining, describing, pre-
dicting, or in determining the most appropriate and relevant
action or direction to be taken. Here all that is required is
that the student know the principle or generalization, that is,
that he be able to recognize or recall correct versions of
them. The actual application of these abstractions in problem
Situations is included in 3. 00 - Application. However, the re-
call of the principle or generalization as well as the recall of
the specific illustrations of them Utilized in the instructional
material may be included in the present category,.

1. 31 Knowledge of Principles and Generalizations--Illustra-


tive Educational Objectives

Knowledge of the important principles by which our ex-


perience with biologica.l phenomena is su.mmarized.
76
The recall of major generalizations about particular cul-
tures.

Knowledge of propositions, of fundamental logical prin-


ciples, of propositional functions and quantifiers, and
of sets.

Knowledge of the principles of chemistry which are rel-


evant to life-processes and to health.

Know.ledge of biological laws of reproduction and hered-


ity.

Understanding of some of the principal elements in the


heritage of Western civi.lization.

Know.ledge of the major principles of high school chem-


istry.

To know the implications of our foreign trade po.licies


for the international economy and for international
goodwil.l.

To know the major principles involved in learning.

To become familiar with the plant illustrations of the


principal laws of heredity and evolution.

To develop an understanding of such basic biological


princip.les as cel.l theory, osmosis, and photosynthesis.

To develop a knowledge of the principles of federalism.

1. 32 - Knowledge of Theories and Structures

Knowledge of the body of principles and generalizations


together with their interrelations which present a clear, round-
ed, and systematic view of a complex phenomenon, prob.lern,
or field. --These are the most abstract formulations. They
can be used to show the interrelation and organization of a
great range of specifics. This category differs from 1. 31 in
that here the emphasis is on a body of principles and general-
izations which are interrelated to form a theory or structure,
whi.le the principles and generalizations in 1. 31 are treated
as particulars which need not be related to each other.
77
1. 32 Knowledge of Theories and Structures--Illustrative
Educational Objectives

The recall of major theories about particular cultures.

Recall and recognition of what is contained in particular


cultures.

Knowledge of the philosophic bases for particular judg-


ments.

Understanding of the interrelations of chemical princi-


ples and theories.

To understand the structure and organization of Congress.

To understand the basic structural organization of the


local city government.

Knowledge of a relatively complete formulation of the


theory of evolution.
78
Testing for Knowledge, and illustrative test items

The major behavior tested in knowledge is whether or


not the student can remember and either cite or recognize
accurate statements in response to particular questions. Al-
though somewhat more than rote memory is required for
knowledge, the form of the question and the level of precision
and exactness required should not be too different from the
way in which the knowledge was originally learned. This
means that the choices in the recognition form of question
must be at the .level of discrimination originally intended by
the learning rather than at an entirely different level.

Probably the art of te'sting has been developed to the


greates t extent in the measurement of knowledge. This type
of behavior can be measured with great efficiency and econ-
omy, and a relatively small sample of problems and questions
in this area can be used to test a very large universe of knowl-
edge. Some efforts have been made to explore the kinds of er -
rors students make in their reactions to knowledge questions.
The analysis of such errors may frequently be useful in plan-
ning alternative choices for recognition questioris, and the use
of scores or summaries of such errors may be useful in de-
termining the accuracy and precision of the student's knowl-
edge and the limits within which this knowledge may be said
tobe known.

There is little point in making a very elaborate analysis


of the testing procedures which are appropriate here, since
most readers are quite familiar with adequate testing tech-
niques for this purpose. For this reason, and for economy
of space, only a minimum number of test illustrations are of-
fered with only occasional comments on specific features of
these illustrations.
79
1. 00 - KNOWLEDGE -- ILLUSTRATIVE TEST ITEMS
1.10 Knowledge of Specifics
1.11 Knowledge of Terminology
1. A synapse can best be described as
1. a mass or layer of protoplasm having many nuclei but lacking
distinct cell boundaries.
2. a lapse of memory caused by inadequate circulation of blood
to the brain.
3. the pairing of maternal with paternal chromosomes during
maturation of the germ cells.
4. the long cylindrical portion of an axon.
5. the point at which the nervous impulse passes from one
neuron to another.
2. Which one of the following phras es about wave motion defines period?
1. The maximum distance a particle is displaced from its point
of rest.
2. The length of time required for a particle to make a complete
vibration.
3. The number of complete vibrations per second.
4. The time rate of change of distance in a given direction.

Directions: In each group below, select the numbered word or phrase


which most nearly corresponds in meaning to the word at the head of
that group, and put its number in the parentheses at the right.
3. antelope
1. fruit 2. animal 3. prelude 4. feeler 5. gallop
.... (

4. spaniel - type of
1. sword 2. dog 3. lace 4. horse 5. coin
.. (

1.12 Knowledge of Specific Facts


5. Jean Valjean was first sentenced ·to the galleys for stealing
1. the Bishop's candlesticks.
2. a loaf of bread.
3. a few sticks of wood.
4. a widow's cow.
5. the cloth from off the altar.
6. The Monroe Doctrine was announced about ten years after the
1. Revolutionary War.
2. War of 1812.
3. Civil War.
4. Spanish-American War.
7. About what proportion of the population of the United States is living
on farms?
1. 10% 2. 20% 3. 35% 4. 50% 5. 60%
80

1. 12 Knowledge of Specific Facts

Directions: The following paired statements refer to structures, func-


tions, or factors which are tobe compared in the quantitative sense.
Blacken answer space

A- if the thing described on the left is greater than that on the


right;
B- if the thing described on the left is less than that on the right;
C- if the left and the right are essentialiythe same.

8, Number of rabbits in (A) is gr. than number of foxes in the


a food web (B) is ls. than Same food w-eb·.-·
(C) is sa. as

9, Maximum size of food (A) is gr. than maximum size of food


particle that can be (B) is ls. than particle that can be eaten
eaten by a sponge (C) is sa. as by a coelenterate.

10, Number of annual (A) is gr. than number of annual rings at


rings at base !:!f the (B) is ls. than point half-way 1!E the trunk
trunk of an old tree (C) is sa. as of the same tree.
-----
11. A sodium ion differs from a sodium atom in that
A- it is an isotope of sodium.
B- it is more reactive.
C- it has a positive charge on its nucleus.
D- it exists only in solution.
E- it has fewer electrons.

Directions: Blacken the answer space corresponding to the work of art


which is earliest in date.
12. A- Browning's Fra Lippo Lippi
B- Whitman's When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomed
C- Tristan and Isolde
D- Shelley's Ode to the West Wind
E- Seurat's Sunday Afternoon on the Grande Jatte

Directions: For each of the following items, blacken answer space


A- if it was in the Articles of Confederation;
B- if it was in the Constitution of 17 87;
C- if it was in the Bill of Rights (Amendments I-X);
D- if it was in Amendments XI-XXI;
E- if it was in two or more of the above.

13. Protected life, liberty and property against governmental action


without due process of law

14. Provided for popular election of United States Senators

15. Provided for a unicameral legislature

16. Gave the treaty-making power to Congress


81
1. 20 Knowledge of Ways and Means of Dealing with Specifics

l. 21 Knowledge of Conventions

Directions: Read each of the following groups of sentences carefully;


then decide which sentence in each group is better than the other sen-
tences in that group.

17. 1. He was energetic and ambitious, his brother being lazy and
indifferent.
2. He was energetic and ambitious, but his brother was lazy and
indifferent.
3. He was energetic and ambitious, as his brother was lazy and
indifferent.
4. He was energetic and ambitious, and his brother was lazy and
indifferent.

Directions: Select from the several choices given in each of the follow-
ing items the one which you consider best.

18. I believe he (l) ,done, (2) did the best that he could.

19. Magnetic poles are usually named


1. plus and minus.
2. red and blue.
3. east and west.
4. north and south.
5. ano-de and cathode.

20. For computation purposes, forces are frequently represented by


l. straight lines.
2. circles.
3. arcs of a circle.
4. angles.
5. objects of three dimensions.

21. Which one of the following should not be classified as payment for
the services of labor?
1. The commissions earned by a real estate salesman
2. The fee paid a justice of the peace for performing a marriage
3. The dividend paid the owner of preferred stock
4. The salary of a United States senator

Directions: lndicate whether each of the following statements is (1) a


fact (2) an opinion or judgment (3) neither a fact nor an opinion.

22. A man who works forty hours per week, fifty weeks per year, at
one dollar per hour, earns an annual wage of $2000.

23. Many workers do not earn $2000 per year.

24. Unemployment insurance would provide some income for the fami-
lies of unemployed workers.
82
25. The first movement of a sonata is commonly distinguished from
the others by its greater
1. rapidity and gayety.
2. length and complexity.
3. emotional abandon.
4. sweetness and charm.
5. structural informality.

Directions: Blacken one answer space for each item according to the
following:
A- if the statement applies to the symphonic poem;
B- if the statement applies to the fugue;
C- if the statement appUes to the mutet;
D- if the statement applies to the suite;
E- if the statement applies to the sonata.

26. Mozart' s Symphony in G . Minor, though composed for orchestra, is


representative of this type in the number, order, and form of its
various movements.

27. The minuet is the only dance movement commonly included in this
musica.1 type.

28. Instrumental works representative of this type are usua.lly based


upon extra-musical ideas, either poetic or descriptive.

29. A work of this type may include among its different movements an
overture or prelude, an air, and a gigue.

1. 22 Knowledge of Trends and Sequences

30. During the process of breathing


1. the air pressure outside is greater than that within the lungs
at the end of an inhalation.
2. the pressure within the lungs is greater than that outside at
the end of an inhalation.
3. the ehest cavity has the smallest volume at the end of an
inhalation.
4. the air pressure within the lungs is greater than that outside
at the end of an exhalation.
5. the pressure inside and outside the lungs is equal at the end
of an inhalation.

31. Which of the above curves represents the change of solubility of


potassium nitrate with an increase in temperature? (Curves not
1. AB shown here)
2. CD
3. EF
4. GH
5. IJ
83

32. The stages in the life history of the housefly are, in orcter,
1. larva - egg - pupa - adult.
2. pupa - larva - egg - adult.
3. pupa - egg - larva - adult.
4. egg - larva - adult - pupa.
5. egg - larva - pupa - adult.

33. Which of the following best describes t'1.e policy of the government
toward railroads in the twenty years following the Civil War?
1. Purchase of railroads by the government after they had been
privately financed and constructed
2. Sale of publicly constructed railroads to private companies
3. Granting of government subsidies to privately owned
and constructed roads
4. Little effort to encourage railroad construction

34. The latter part of the nineteenth century was notable for
1. the consolidation of small businesses into larger organiza-
tions.
2. the appearance of the "partnership" type of business organi-
zation.
3. government restriction on unduly large profits.
4. the decreased importance of the middleman between pro-
ducer and consumer.

1. 23 Knowledge of Classification and Categories

35. In all fairly complex animals the skeleton and the muscles are
developed from the primary germ layer known as the
1. ectoderm. 4. endoderm.
2. neurocoele. 5. mesoderm.
3. epithelium.

36. lt is found that a specialized cell conducts impulses, but performs


no other function well. Such a cell would best be classified as a(n)
1. muscle cell. 4. cartilage cell.
2. gland cell. 5. nerve cell.
3. epithelial cell.

37. An engineer who designs houses is called


1. a carpenter. 4. a draftsman.
2. a civil engineer. 5. a mechanical engineer.
3. an architect.

38. Which of the following is a chemical change?


1. Evaporation of alcohol 4. Melting of wax
2. Freezing of water 5. Mixing of sand and sugar
3. Burning of oll

39. The branch of biological science which deals with the structure of
living organisms is called
1. physiology. 3. ecology. 5. embryology.
2. pathology. 4. anatomy.
84

1. 24 Knowledge of Criteria - - Illustrative Test Items

Directions: In the following, select the one best completion.

In the preface to the second edition of the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant
discusses the problem of placing metaphysics upon the secure path of a
science.
40. By science in this context he means
A- a body of generalizations whose truth is guaranteed by ob-
servation of facts.
B- demonstrations of conclusions from assumptions which must
always ret.a.in a hypothetical character.
C- dialectic in the Platonic sense.
D- a body of knowledge corresponding closely to the intellectual
virtue called "scientific knowledge" by Aristotle.

41. In the
view of John Ruskin, the greatest picture is
A-that which imitates best.
B-that which teaches us most.
C-that which exhibits the greatest power.
D- that which conveys the greatest number of the greatest ideas.

42. The criterion Darwin uses to distinguish the more variable species
from the less variable species in Chapter II is
A- number of individuals in the species.
B- frequency of individual differences in the species.
C- number of varieties in the species.
D- number of c.losely related species.
E- number of different climatic conditions tolerated by the
species.
85
1. 25 Know.ledge of Methodology

43. A scientist discovers new facts by


1. consulting the writings of Aristot.le.
2 . thinking about the probabilities.
3. making careful observations and conducting experiments.
4. debating questions with his friends.
5. referring to the works of Darwin.

44. We wish to know whether overeating affects the probable length of


life. A scientific approach to this prob.lern would be to
1. see what the ancient Greek philosophers thought about the
matter.
2. perform a laboratory experiment with two groups of white
rats, one group consistently overfed and the other group
kept on a normal diet.
3. ask fifty people selected at random and determine their
average opinion.
4. study food advertisements that re.late to the problem.
5. ask ten old people what they ate.

45, One use of the Periodic Table has been to


1. determine the solubility of gases.
2. find the degree of ionization of many compounds.
3. predict undiscovered elements.
4. determine mo.lecular weights of compounds accurately.

46. When the scientist is confronted with a prob.lern, his first step
toward solving it should usually be to
1. construct or purchase equipment.
2. perform an experiment.
3. draw conclusions.
4. urge other scientists to cooperate with him in working it out.
5. gather all available information on the subject.

47. Of the following, which represents the most important differences


between the scientific method as used in the social sciences and as
used in the natural sciences?
1. Employment of the deductive rather than the inductive method
of reasoning.
2. Study of the developmental aspects of various problems.
3. Necessity of regarding hypotheses as tentative in nature.
4. lmportance of understanding the prob.lern of causation.
5. Necessity of recognizing the value judgments of the inves -
tigator.

48. Stars are composed of the same e.lements as are found on the earth
Which of the following sources yields information supporting this
statemerit?
1. Observations of absorption spectra of dark interstellar
matter.
2. Observations of spectra of stars.
3. Observations of brightness of stars.
4. Observations of density of stars.
5. Observations of the wave length of maximum radiation from
stars.
86

49. Fossils in rocks constitute valuable clues to the past. Seme of


these fossils are identical with animals existing today. How does
this affect the investigation of geological history?
1. Suchfossils make the work much simpler since they can be
easily traced.
2. These fossils are rare and therefore do not weaken the over-
all results very much.
3. These fossils are extremely valuable since observation of
their living counterparts yields much information as to
climates and physical conditions of the geologic past.
4. The existence of living counterparts of fossils is immaterial
since nnl.y the fossil itself is important.

50. Which of the following provides the best method for determining
the radius of a star?
1. Measure the distance to the star and the diameter of the
image of the star in a telescope of known length; the radius
can be then obtained geometrically.
2. Measure the distance, apparent brightness, and surface
temperature. From the calculated brightness of a square
centimeter of surface at that temperature and the absolute
brightness, the area of the disk, and hence the radius is
determined.
3. The speed of rotation of the edge of disk of a rotating star
can be measured from the Doppler shift. From this and the
period of rotation the radius can be derived.
4. In double stars the gravitational attraction d~pends on the
density and the volume, hence the radius can be determined.

1. 30 Knowledge of the Universals and Abstractions in a Field

1. 31 Knowledge of Principles and Generalizations

51. Which of the following is the best description of the pattern of


society in the 18th century colonies?
1 . A system of fixed castes ranging from the slave at the bottom
through the indentured servant, the free workman, the small
farmer, to the nobility at the top.
2. A system of voluntary contracts among substantially equal
individuals differentiated only by the amount of wealth they
possessed.
3. A hierarchy of socia.l classes ranging from the nobility at the
top, who controlled the society, to the indentured servant
and slave at the bottom, who did the heavy work.
4. A hierarchy of social classes in which individuals moved up
and down with comparative ease and speed, except the b.lack
slaves, andin which a very large number objected to the
continuance of well-defined classes.
87
52. Which one of the following is the best summary of Calhoun's views
about the nature of the union?
1. lt is a compact formed between sovereign states, each of
which retains the right to interpose its authority.
2. lt is a compact formed between sovereign states, but the
states have no right to interpose.
3. lt is an instrument adopted by the American people, as one
aggregate community.

53. If the volume of a given mass of gas is kept constant, the pressure
may be diminished by
l . reducing the temperature. 4. decreasing the density.
2. raising the temperature. 5. increasing the density.
3. adding heat.

54. Some generalizations concerning the common metals are that


1. most of the metals form only one insoluble salt.
2. all the simple salts of the alkali metals are soluble.
3. the metals of the alkaline earth group are precipitated as
carbonates.
4. the alkali carbonates are insoluble in water.
5. many of the heavy metal sulfides are insoluble in neutral or
slightly acid solution,
55. Which of the following statements of the relationship between mar-
ket price and normal price is true?
1. Over a short period of time, market price varies directly
with changes in normal price.
2. Over a long period of time, J:YJ.arket price tends to equal
normal price.
3. Market price is usually lower than normal price.
4. Over a long period of time, ,market price determines
normal price.

Directions: For items 56-59 select from the five principles at the right
the most closely related principle and mark the corresponding answer
space.
Statements Principles

5o. Fossils of primates first appear 1. There have been profound


in the Cenozoic rock strata, changes in the climate on
while trilobite remains are the earth.
found in the Protorozoic rocks. 2. Coordination and integration
of action is generally slower
57. The Arctic and Antarctic regions in plants thad in animals.
are sparsely populated. 3. There is an increasing com-
plexity of structure and
58. Plants have no nervous system. function from lower to high-
er forms of life.
59. Large coal beds exist in 4. All life comes from life and
Alaska. produces its own kind of liv-
ing organisms.
5. Light is a limiting factor to
life.
88

1. 32 Knowledge of Theories and Structures

Directions: Items 60-62 are concerned with possible evidences in sup-


port of the theory of biological evolution. Select from the key list the
category to which the evidence mentioned in the item belongs.
1. Comparative anatomy
2. Comparative physiology
3. Classification
4. Embryology
5. Paleontology

60. lntergrading form s of pl.ants and animals diffcring from 8arlie1·


species indicate that evolutionary change is probably taking place
today in all living organisms.

61. Hematin crystals t'rom the hemoglobin of various vertebrales have


the same chemical composition.

62. The human heart has two chambers at a very early developmental
stage.
2. 00 - COMPREHENSION

Probably the largest general class of intellectual abili-


ties and skills emphasized in schools and col.leges are those
which involve comprehension. That is, when students are
confronted with a communication, they are expected to know
what is being communicated and to be able to make some
use of the material or ideas contained in it. The communi-
cation may be in oral or written form, in verbal or symbolic
form, or, if we allow a relatively broad use of the term
"communication," it may refer to material in concrete form
as well as to material embodied on paper. For instance, we
commonly expect comprehension of a physics demonstration,
a geologic formation viewed on a field trip, a building illus-
trating a particular architectual feature, a musical work
played by an orchestra. And, of course, we speak of com-
prehension of the above phenomena when presented in verbal,
pictorial, or symbolic form_ on paper.

Although the term "comprehension" has been frequent.ly


associated with reading, e. g., reading comprehension, the
use to which it is being put here is a somewhat broader one
in that it is related to a greater variety of communications
than that encompassed by written verbal materials. In an-
other sense, the use of the term here is somewhat more
limited than usual, since comprehension is not made synony-
mous with complete understanding or even with the fullest
grasp of a message. Here we are using the term "compre-
hension" to include those objectives, behaviors, or responses
which represent an understanding of the literal message con-
tained in a communication. In reaching such understanding,
the student may change the communication in his mind or in
his overt responses to some parallel form more meaningful
to him. There may also be responses which represent sim-
ple extensions beyond what is given in the communication
itself.

Three types of comprehension behavior are considered


here. The first is trans.lation which means that an individual
can put a communication into other language, into other terms,
or into another form of communication. lt will usually in-
volve the giving of meaning to the various parts of a commu-
nication, taken in isolation, although such meanings may in
part be deterrnined by the context in which the ideas appear.
89
90
The second type of behavior is interpretation which in-
volves dealing with a communication as a configuration of
ideas whose comprehension may require a reordering of the
ideas into a new configuration in the mind of the individual.
This also includes thinking about the relative importance of
the ideas, their interrelationships. and their relevance to
generalizations implied or described in the original commu-
nication. Evidence of interpretation behavior may be found
in the inferences, generalizations, or summarizations pro-
duced by the individual. Interpretation as here defined dif-
fers from analysis. In the latter the emphasis is on the
form, the organization, the effectiveness, and the logic of
the communication. lt differs from application in that ap-
plication is more definitely concerned with the meanings a
communication has for other generalizations, situations,
and phenomena, or the meanings that generalizations known
by the student have for the communication. lt differs from
evaluation in that evaluation is characterized by the formu-
lating of judgments explicitly based on criteria.

The third type of behavior tobe considered under com-


prehension is extrapolation. lt includes the making of esti-
mates or predictions based on understanding of the trends,
tendencies, or conditions described in the communication.
lt may also involve the making of inferences with respect to
implications, consequences, corollaries and effects which
are in accordance with the conditions described in the com-
munication. lt differs from application, however, in that
the thinking is based on what is given rather than on some
abstraction brought from the other experiences to the situ-
ation, such as a general principle or ru.le of procedure. Ex-
trapolation may include judgments with respect to a universe
where the communication characterizes a sample, or con-
versely with respect to a sample where the communication
describes a universe. For the purpose of classification,
interpolation may be regarded as a type of extrapolation in
that judgments with respect to intervals within a sequence
of data presented in a communication are similar to judg-
ments going beyond the data in the usual sense of extrapola-
tion.

Each of these types of educational objectives or behavior


is further treated in the following.
91
2. 10 Translation

Translation behavior occupies a transitional position be-


tween the behaviors classified under the category of knowl-
edge and types of behavior described under the headings of
interpretation, extrapolation, analysis, synthesis, applica-
tion, and evaluation. lt will usually be found that individual
competence in translation is dependent on the possession of
the requisite or relevant knowledge. lt is also true that un-
less an individual can give the denoted meaning to each of the
various parts of a communication and/or in terms of immedi-
ate or adjacent context, he will be unable to engage in more
complex thinking about the communication. For such think-
ing, a given term in a communication must symbolize for the
individual a general concept or even an aggregate of relevant
ideas. An abstract idea may need to be transformed to con-
crete or everyday terms to be useful in further thinking
about some problem presented by the communication. Some-
times an extended part of a communication may need to be
translated into briefer, or even more abstract, terms or
symbols, to facilitate thinking. This type of translation may
carry over into more complex behavior, such as analysis,
synthesis or application, when previous instruction has not
made such translation explicit. On the other hand, when
instruction has emphasized the particular points involved,
the translation may be more akin to simple recall of knowl-
edge.
92

2.10 Translation -- Illustrative Educational Objectives

Translation from one level of abstraction to another

The ability to translate a problem given in technical


or abstract phraseology into concrete or less abstract
phraseology--"state the problem in your own words."

The ability to translate a lengthy part of a communi-


cation into briefer or more abstract terms.

The ability to translate an abstraction, such as some


general principle, by giving an illustration or sample.

Translation from sym.bolic form to another form, or vice


versa

The ability to translate relationships expressed in


symbolic form, including illustrations, maps, tables,
diagra.m.s, graphs, and mathematical and other formu-
las, to verbal form and vice versa.

Given geometric concepts in verbal terms, the ability


to translate into visual or spatial terms.

The ability to prepare graphical representations of


physical phenomena or of observed or recorded data.

The ability to read musical scores.

The ability to read an architectural plan.

Translation from one verbal form to another

The ability to translate non-literal statements


(metaphor, symbolism, irony, exaggeration) to
ordinary English.
93

The ability to comprehend the significance of the


particular words of a poem in the light of their
context.

The ability to translate (with or without a dictionary)


foreign language prose or poetry into good English.

2. 20 Interpretation

In order to interpret a communication, the reader must


first of all be able to translate each of the major parts of
it--this includes not only the words and phrases, but also
the various representational devices used. He must then be
able to go beyond this part-for-part rendering of the com-
munication to comprehend the relationships between its
various parts, to reorder, or to rearrange it in his mind so
as to secure some total view of what the communication con-
tains and to relate it to his own fund of experiences and
ideas. Interpretation also includes competence in recogniz-
ing the essentials and differentiating them from the less
essential portions or from the relatively irrelevant aspects
of the communication. This requires some facility in ab-
stracting generalizations from a set of particulars as we.11
as in weighing and assessing the relative emphasis to be
given the different elements in the communication. In these
respects, interpretation becomes synonymous with analysis
and has characteristics in common with evaluation.

The essential behavior in interpretation is that when


given a communication the student can identify and compre-
hend the major ideas which are included in it as we.11 as
understand their interrelationships. This requires a nice
sense of judgment and caution to avoid reading into the docu-
ment one's own ideas and interpretations. lt also requires
some ability to go beyond mere repetition and rephrasing of
parts of the document to determine the !arger and more gen-
eral ideas contained in it. The interpreter must also recog-
nize the limits within which interpretations can be drawn.
94

2. 20 Interpretation~-Ulustrative educational objectives

The ability to grasp the thought of a work as


a whole at any desired level of generality.

The ability to comprehend and interpret with


increasing depth and clarity various types of
reading material.

The ability to distinguish among warranted,


unwarranted, or contradicted conclusions drawn
from a body of data.

The ability to interpret various types of


social data.

Ability in making proper qualifications when


interpreting data.
95

2. 30 Extrapolation

In preparing a communication, the writer attempts not


only to state what he believes the truth of the matter to be,
but also some of the consequences of it. While occasionally
the writer is exhaustive, has detailed all of the conclusions
to be drawn, and has indicated all of the possible conse -
quences or implications of his ideas or material, this is
rarely the case. Usual.ly, the writer is unaware of or makes
no effort to determine or state all of the conclusions to be
drawn. The writer is limited in determining implications
and consequences for new situations by his subject matter,
which may be so general and widely applicable as to make
impossible any attempt to explain all its ramifications, by
his own lack of knowledge of all the possible situations in
which it may be applied, and, finally, by the fact _that he
must in some ways limit his problem or presentations if he
is to do an ·effective job.

The reader must, if he is to make full use of a commu-


nication, be able to extend it beyond the limits set by the
writer as well as to apply some of the ideas of the commu-
nication to Situations and problems not included explicitly
in the communication. Mention was made earlier of extra-
polation in the sense of thinking in terms of the relations
between a sample and a universe and vice versa, and also
of interpolation as akin to extrapolation where there are
gaps in a sequence.

Accurate extrapolation requires that the reader be able


to translate as well as interpret the document, and in addi-
tion, he must be able to extend the trends or tendencies
beyond the given data and findings of the document to deter-
mine implications, consequences·, corollaries, effects, etc.,
which are in accordance with the conditions as literally
described in the original communication. Extrapolation
requires that the reader be well aware of the limits within
which the communication is posed as well as the possible
limits within which it can be extended. In practically all
cases, the reader must recognize that an extrapolation can
only be an inference which has some degree of probability--
certainty with respect to extrapolations is rare.
96

Extrapolation as here defined is to be distinguished


from application in that the thinking is characterized by the
extension of that which is given to intermediate, past, future,
or other conditions or situations. The thinking is usually
less abstract than in the case of application where use is
made of generalizations, rules of procedure, and the like.

2. 30 Extrapolation--lllustrative educational objectives

The ability to deal with the conclusions of a work


in terms of the immediate inferences made from
the explicit statements.

The ability to draw conclusions and state them ef-


fectively. (Recognizing the limitations of the data,
formulating accurate inferences and tenable hy-
potheses.)

Skill in predicting continuation of trends.

Skill in interpolation where there are gaps in data.

The ability to estimate or predict consequences of


courses of action described in a communication.

The ability to be sensitive to factors which may


render predictions inaccurate.

The ability to distinguish consequences which are


only relatively probable fiom those for which
there is a high degree of probability.

The ability to differentiate value judgments from


predictions of consequences.
97
TESTING FOR COMPREHENSION, AND
ILLUSTRATIVE TEST ITEMS
Testing for translation objectives.

In appraising student ability to translate technical terms,


physics principles expressed in algebraic symbols, diagrams,
or graphs by means of reca.11 or recognition types of exer-
cises, there may be clear-cut relationships between what is
given and the response written or identified by the student.
For example, terms may be .listed and their definitions re-
quested, or the definitions may be given and the student
merely asked to recall or recognize the appropriate terms.
In this situation the behaviors evaluated are equivalent to
those listed under the category of knowledge, and this is
particularly true where instruction has made explicit such
formal associations. But these identical exercises may
evaluate translation objectives which involve more than mere
recall or recognition if instruction has been less formal and
the thought processes of the student involve making new
associations. For example, the answer to be selected as the
definition of a term may be a definition which differs in
phraseology from the formal one he has learned, and hence
constitutes a novel situation.

Student ability to translate formal definitions or state-


ments of principles may also be evaluated by exercises re-
quiring him to recall or recognize correct illustrations or
examples. But exercises requiring the selection of the
"best" definition of a term may require more than the asso-
ciation of definition with term, if the student must judge the
adequacy of the various definitions given. In still other
types of exercises, more may be given than the terms or
symbols and the student may have the advantage of contextual
clues. Here again the nature of the previous instruction
is the deciding factor rather than the appearance of the item.
If the evaluation is to be of a behavior transcending knowl-
edge, the context in which the terms or symbols appear must
be to some extent novel context.

Additional complexity at the translation level of behavior


occurs in certain types of exercises where more than one
new term or symbol occurs and the student, while success-
ively translating the terms or symbols, will need to consider
their interrelationships. Item 18 on page 104 is an example
of this sort of evaluation.
98
Evaluation of objectives at higher levels in the taxonomy
is often impaired because of the student' s inability to perform
the initial step in problem solution: the translation of the
problem into known terms. For example, the effectiveness
of exercises used to evaluate application of general principles
may be reduced because numerous students are unable to
translate such terms as "Avogadro's principle," "Doppler
effect, " and "Gresham 's law. 11 For effective measurement
where knowledge of such terms is not universal, the concepts
they represent must be given in simpler or less abstract
phraseology.

But even the simplest of demands given in either essay


or objective exercises requires some translation for
certain students. Experimentation has shown that some
students are able to reduce or simplify the statement of
the problem or to change it to language more characteristic
of their own thinking without essentially changing the prob-
.lern. But many students are unable to do such translation
and may so distort the problem that they no longer are at-
tempting to solve the same problem. 1 Evidence with re-
spect to translation difficulties of the kinds described above
may be obtained through use of appropriately worded essay
exercises requiring the student to record the various steps
in his thinking or it may be more effectively obtained through
use of "thinking aloud" techniques for studying mental pro-
cesses.

1 B.loom, B. S., and Broder, Lois, Problem-solving


processes of college students ( A Supplementary Educa -
tional Monograph ), Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
Summer, 1950.
99

2.00 - COMPREHENSION -- ILLUSTRATIVE TEST ITEMS

2.10 Translation from one level of abstraction to another.

l. A group of examiners is engaged in the production of a taxonomy of


educational objectives. In ordinary English, what are these persons
doing?
A- Evaluating the progress of education
B- Classifying teaching goals
C- Preparing a curriculum
D- Constructing learning exercises

This exercise involves translation of 11 taxonomy'' to 11 classification, 11

a less abstract term. There is no context clue.

2. "The idea systems of primitive groups of people are highlyrestricted


and traditional in content and, in addition, have been transmuted
into customary ways of doing things. 11 This best illustrates
A- the stability of the primitive social organization.
B- how primitive people evaluate the worth of ideas.
C- the change of ideas to action.
D- the repetition of customary ways of doing things.
E- the slow progress of primitive peoples.

This requires translation of the term 11 transmuted", to the less ab-


stract word "change 11 and here translation is aided by context clues.

3. When a current is induced by the relative motion of a conductor and


a magnetic field, the direction of the induced current is such as to
establish a magnetic field that opposes the motion. This principle
is illustrated by
A- a magnet attracting a nail.
B- an electric generator or dynamo.
C- the motion of a compass needle.
D- an electric doorbe.11.

This involves translation of a formal and abstract definition by re-


quiring the student to i!ientify a concrete example.

4. While listening to lectures in physical science you have heard the


following terms frequently used: 11 hypotheses, 11 "theories, 11 11 sci-
entific laws, 11 11 scientific method, 11 and 11 scientific attitude. 11 In a
series of paragraphs, indicate in your own words andin terms of
everyday experiences what these terms mean to you.

This exercise, an essay question, also invo.lves the giving of con-


crete examples and also the behavior of 11 giving in your own words. 11
Whether more than knowledge is required for the third and fourth ex-
ercises depends on previous instruction.
100
5. Which of the following represents the best definition of the term
''protoplasm" ?
A- A complex colloidal system made up of water, proteins, and
fats.
B- Anything capable of growth by a regular progressive series of
changes into a more complex unit.
C- A complex mixture of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates, ca-
pable of responding to changes in its envirorunent.
D- A complex colloidal system of proteins, fats, carbohydrates,
inorganic salts, and enzymes which manifests life.

This exercise requires judgment of the best definition of the term


"proloplasm. " l'he cteiinit1ons g1ven vary in correctness anct com-
pleteness.

6. "All ideas are products of experience, or of reflection on experi-


ence. Sensations when given meaning are perceptions. Association
of perceptions, or of simple ideas, leads to complex or abstract
conceptions whose original source is still experience." This quo-
tation best represents the point of view of
A- positivism.
B- rationalism.
C- idealism.
D- empiricism.
E- pragmatism.

This requires the student to translate a concrete description of a


type of philosophy to the abstract technical. term standing for the
type. This could involve mere recall, but may require more than
recall if instruction has been characterized by no such brief sum-
marization of the nature of empiricism.

7. When a beggar justifies his begging by the claim that the world owes
him a living, he is
A- behaving like a psychotic person.
B- showing a paranoid symptom.
C- having an hallucination.
D- making a typical infantile reaction.
E- ralionalizing.

In this exercise a concrete example is given and the student required


to identify the correct abstract term. More than knowledge is re-
quired if the example is new to the students.
101

slation from symbolic form to another form, or vice versa

:artoon best illustrates:


Social problems are relative to time, place, and culture.
The process of inventions is cumulative.
Social problems are more prevalent in a dynamic society.
There are differences in the rates of change between differ-
ent phases of a culture.

mcept illustrated by the cartoon is


techno.Logical progress.
cultural lag.
cultural diffusion.
institutional maladjustment.
102

10. Newton's Law of Gravitation is expressed algebraically Fm GM~


d".
F represents force, M and m two masses, Gis a constant, and d
represents the distance between the masses. Assuming that M
and m, as weil as G, remain the same, or constant, which of the
following graphs shows how the force changes as the distance be-
tween the masses varies?

FI / F~

A.~ B.~

d d

d d

The exercise presented above illustrates translation from algebraic


to geometric or graphic form. The exercises which follow involve
translation from graphic to verbal form.
103

11. Which of the following graphs best represents the demand schedule
of a typical commodity under competitive conditions?
A. B. C. D.

12, Which of the above graphs best represents the demand schedule of
a commodity for which there is a perfectly inelastic demand?

13. Which of the following graphs best represents the supply schedule
of a commodity under conditions of perfect competition?

•1~ •1~B
"llc.s QJl/o.s
~Li~~ tL s
Quantity Quantity Quantity Quantity

14. Which of the above graphs best represents the supply situation
where a monopo.list maintains a uniform price regardless of the
amounts which people buy?

·1'he following five formulas represent the structure of five different or-
ganic compounds. After the item number on the answer sheet, blacken
the one lettered space which designates the compound to which each item
correctly refers.
IfHHH HH HH~ H~ HH H 0
H-y-y-y-y-H
' ' 1 H-C-C-OH
l 1
H-C-C-C-H H-C- =C-C-H
1
H-c-c-f
HHHH HH HIH H H1 ' OH
H-y-H
H

A. B. C. D. E.

15. The compound which can neutralize bases and forms salts.
16. The hydrocarbon which has the least tendency to "knock" among
those listed above.

17. The compound which decolorizes bromine and potassium perman-


ganate solution.

Note: While each of the formulas pertains to a specific organic com-


pound, each of the compounds is representative of a type or class
104

of compounds. The compound labeled B is but one of numerous alco-


hols. Hence each formula serves to symbolize a type. A student
may say to himself with respect to D. "The double bond between two
adjacent carbon atoms shows that this is an unsaturated compound.
All such compounds react with bromine or. potassium permanganate
decolorizing them. Hence. the answer to 1 17 is D. 11 Giving meaning
to the double bond -C=C- is to translate the symbol for such a
0
union of carbon atoms. Similarly.
-C.-, signifies an organic acid
'OH
and leads to the conclusion that such a compound will neutralize a
base and form a salt.

18. Coulomb's Law of Electrostatic Attraction states: "The force of


attraction or repulsion between two charged bodies is directly pro-
portional to the product of the charges, and inversely proportional
to the square of the distance between them. 11 lf F is force, Q and
Q' are charges, D is the dielectric constant and d is distance, a
mathematical statement of the law is

A- F= Q B- F = QQ' c- F= QQ'
Dd 2 D 2d Dd 2

2
D- D = _g__ E- d= QQ'
Fd DF
Note: lf the student has memorized the equation given as answer C,
mere recall is sufficient in selecting the correct answer. The cor-
rect answer can be obtained, however, through translation of the
verbal statement to mathematical symbols.

2. lO Translation from one verbal form into another verbal form

19. Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour: England hath need of
11

thee; she is a fen of stagnant waters" --Wordsworth.

The metaphor, "she is a fen of stagnant waters," indicates that


Wordsworth felt that England was
A- largely swampy land.
B- in a state of turmoil and unrest.
C- making no progress.
D- in a generally corrupt condition.
105
.l When I consider everything that grows
2 Holds in perfection but a little moment,
3 That this huge stage presenteth nought but shows
4 Whereon the stars in secret influence comment;
5 When I perceive that men as plants increase,
6 Cheered and checked even by the self-same sky;
7 Vaunt in their youthfu.l sap, at height decrease,
8 And wear their brave state out of memory;
9 Then the conceit of this inconstant stay
10 Sets you most rich in youth before my sight,
11 Where wasteful Time debateth with Decay,
12 To change your day of youth to sullied night;
And all in war with Time for love of you,
As he takes from you, I engraft you new.
(Shakespeare, Sonnet XV)

20. In the first two lines Shakespeare says that


A- all living things are examples of the perfection of nature.
B- every living thing retains perfection only for a very brief time.
C- man, part of all living things, is basically not perfect.
D- all living things show the characteristics of evolution.

21. In .lines 3 and 4, the poet says that


A- life, which is subject to the laws of nature, is ephemeral and
transitory, like a p.lay.
B- all the world's a stage, whose lighting is given by the stars.
C- man, a character in a great drama, is controlled by the
"stars," that is, destiny.
D- the stage of the universe is controlled by the laws of nature.

Note: The original series included three more exercises relevant to


other lines in the sonnet. Here the Student is expected to make use
of the context in order to determine the appropriate translation.

22. Das Gut gehört immer noch dem Grossvater:


A- Grandfather still hears well.
B- Grandfather always hears good things.
C- The estate still belongs to grandfather.
D- The good people always listen to grandfather.
E- The goods sti.11 belong to grandfather.

Note: The student is expected to select the English sentence which


represents the best translation of the German sentence. Similar ex-
ercises may be written with an English sentence as the item stem
and German sentences as the answers. ·The same type of exercise
cou.ld be extended to the use of brief paragraphs as item stems and
as answers. In every case, as is true of answer C of exercise 22,
the best answer should be more than a literal translation.
106
Testing for interpretation objectives, and illustrative test
items

In evaluating the ability to interpret, the individual is


presented with a communication and is asked to supply or
recognize inferences which may be drawn from the commu-
nication. The inferences may be at a more general level
than the communication itself and should, where possible, be
based an more than one element in the communication. Some-
times, lhe inferences rnay r·epresent generalizations based
an particulars given in the communication, or may pertain
to particulars to which generalizations given in the commu-
nication apply.

Essay exercises can be used in the evaluation of student


ability to interpret. The essay exercise should accompany
the communication to be interpreted and this communication
may be one or more quoted paragraphs, a cartoon, a graph,
or a table of numerical data. For example, a student may
be asked to compare or contrast the points of view of Hamil-
ton and Jefferson with respect to the powers of the National
Government given quotations from The Federalist and from
the Second Inaugural. The interpretation of a lengthy quota-
tion may be that of preparing a summary or outline. One or
more cartoons may be the basis for an essay exercise re-
quiring the student to interpret the cartoons with respect to
some contemporary social problem or issue. Similarly,
graphs or tables with appropriately worded essay questions
may require the student to interpret the data thus presented
and to draw inferences from them respecting their interrela-
tionship or meaning as a whole.

Objective exercises can also be used in the evaluation of


interpretation ability. Thus, the exercises which follow the
quoted paragraphs, cartoons, tables, or graphs may either
be any of the more usual objective types, for example, the
multiple choice, or students may be asked to classify items
relevant to the quoted material according to certain cate-
gories. As an example of the latter, if two selections are
given, the student may be asked to classify items as 11 true of
the first selection, 11 11 true of the second selection, 11 11 true of
both selections, 11 and "true of neither selection. 11 The items
107

may be inferences which correctly pertain to interrelation-


ships in either or both of the selections or they may be in-
correct inferences or generalizations. A second example
employs a very useful type of direction, particularly where
the quoted material in paragraph form presents scientific
data, or such data are presented in tabular or graphic form.
lt requests the student to classify items according to whether
or not the data are sufficient to prove the truth or falsity of
the items or are insufficient for such judgments. Frequently,
the categories ask the students to judge each item with
respect to whether the given data definitely support its truth,
indicate that the item is probably true, definitely reveal that
it is false, indicate that it is probably false, or whether the
data are insufficient for any judgment with respect to the
truth or falsity of the item. These categories may be ordered
in the form of a scale: (1) definitely true, (2) probably
true, (3) insufficient evidence, (4) probably false, (5) defi-
nitely false. 2

Test scores differentiating between "crude errors," "go-


ing beyond the data, 11 and ' 1over-caution 11 are especially' us_e-
ful in evaluating student skill in interpretation since such
scores may be relatively independent of knowledge of content
and may be valid measures of modes of operation and gener-
alized techniques for dealing with materials and problems.
If the categories are in the order suggested at the close of
the preceding paragraph, 11 going beyond the data, 11 or the
tendency to over-generalize may be evaluated by counting
incorrect answers which are in the direction of the extremes
of the scale. Over-caution is evaluated by counting incorrect
answers which are in the direction of the center of the scale.
The tendency to make 11 crude errors 11 is evaluated by count-
ing incorrect answers which traverse the center of the scale.

2 Use of this type of item, however, should be limited


to instances in which the student is given some pre-test
training in the proper use of these terms. Otherwise, the
tendency to use 11 probably true" or 11 probably false" to ex-
press the student's doubt about his own answer, as opposed
to doubt about the data's completeness, tends to obscure
proper interpretation of the results.
108

(See the notes which fo.llow the first of the illustrative series
of the exercises of this type.) Exercises of the type just de-
scribed usually ask the student to make his judgments or in-
terpretations only on the basis of the data given. Occasion-
ally, the student is asked to evaluate the truth or falsity of
items in terms of both the given data andin terms of what-
ever other knowledge he possesses. ltems 49-58 of the il-
lustrative exercises given on the fo.llowing pages permit
the use of other knowledge in the interpretation of the data
given.
109
2. 20 Interpretation

Consumers' Price Index, 1918-49


(1935 - 39„ 100)

Per Cent Per Cent


180.--.---,----y----r--,----.--,-1180

1601------+---+--+--+---;--

120

Source: U. S. Dept. of Labor,


Bureau of Labor Statistics

Making your judgments only in terms of the information given in the


graph, classify each of the fo.llowing items by blackening space
A- if the item is definitely true;
B- if the item is probably true;
C- if the information given is not sufficient to indicate any
degree of truth or falsity in the item;
D- if the item is probably false;
E- if the item is definitely false.

23. People were better off in 1932 than in 1949.


24. Since 1918 to the present, the dollar was most valuable in 1933.
25. More prices went up than went down between 1932 and 1940.
26. Men in the age group of 30-40 made the most income gains in the
past decade.
27. In 1940-46 some lass in real income was most probably incurred
by people living on interest from bonds.
28. More prices went down than went up between 1926 and 1929 .·
29. Anyone living on a fixed income was much worse off in 1949 than
in 1940.

Note: "Going beyond the data" requires a count of B items marked


A, C items marked A, B, D, or E, and D items marked E. "Over-
caution" requires a count of A items marked B, B and D items
marked C, and E items marked D. Evaluation of "crude errors" re-
quires a count of A and B items marked D or E and D or E items
marked A or•,B.
110

DIRECTIONS: Below are some statistics relating to education and oc-


cupations. You are to judge what conclusions may be drawn from them.

Occupational distri-
bution found in a Distribution of occupa-
sample of male tions in the population
college graduales* as a whole, 1950

OCCUPATIONS PERCENTAGES

Executives, minor officials, 23.5 9.1


partners, proprietors

Professional workers 51. 3 4.7

Salesmen 6.0 Less than 1%

Skilled workers 7.1 33.8

Clerical workers 8.7 13. 4

Unskilled workers 1. 7 26.1

Farmers 1. 7 13. 0
100. 0 100. 0
*You may assume that the sample selected is representative of
all male college graduates in the United States.
Below are a series of statements relating to occupations and education.
Blacken answer space
A- if the foregoing statistics alone are sufficient to prove the
statement true;
B- if the foregoing statistics alone are sufficient to indicate that
the statement is probably true;
C- if the foregoing statistics alone are not sufficient to indicate
whether there is any degree of truth orfalsity in the statei:pent;
D- if the foregoing statistics alone are sufficient to indicate that
the statement is probably false;
E- if the foregoing statistics alone are sufficient to prove the
statement false.

30. Typically farmers are completely uneducated.


31. The professions absorb a larger percentage of male college gradu-
ates than any other group in the country.
32. Sons of unskilled workers and sons of farmers have an approxi-
mately equal chance to go to college.
33. Educational opportunity for the lower classes is increasing.
34. The same proportions of farmers and of unskilled workers are
college graduates.
111

DIRECTIONS: The following generalizations are sometimes inferred


from the foregoing statistics on occupations and education. You are to
judge whether or not the generalizations made below can be made on
the basis of these data alone or if certain additional data are needed.
For the following items, blacken answer space
A- if the generalization can be made on the basis of the foregoing
statistics, without any additional information.
B- if in addition to or instead of the foregoing statistics you would
need to know the percentage of people in each occupation who
were unable to attend college.
C- if in addition to or instead of the foregoing statistics you would
need to know the percentage of male college graduates in each
occupation whose fathers were college graduates and were in
the same occupation.
D- if the generalization cannot properly be made even if the addi-
tional information described in Band C were available.

35, Unskilled, ski.lled and clerical workers do not value college edu-
cation as much as do businessmen.

36. The low percentage of college graduates in the skilled, clerical,


and unskilled worker class reveals a lack of social mobility in
America.

37, Higher education provides a medium in this country whereby


some youth improve their status.

38. Children of business and professional men have a greater oppor-


tunity to enter well-paid occupations.

39. Social mobility in the United States is increasing.

A scientist cultivated a large colony of disease-producing bacteria.


From them, he extracted a bacteria-free material referred to as sub-
stance X. A large dose of substance X was then injected into each of a
group of animals (group A), These animals promptly developed some
of the symptoms normally produced in infection by the bacteria in ques-
tion. Then, into each of a number of other animals (group B), the sci-
entist made a series of injections of small <loses of substance X. Three
weeks after this series of injections, and continuing for two years there-
after, this group of animals (group B) could be made to develop the dis-
ease by injecting them with several thousand times the number of bac-
teria which was fatal to untreated animals.
After the, item number on the answer sheet, blacken space
A- if the data given above definite.ly show that the item correctly
completes the introductory statement.
B- if the data given above do not definite.ly show that the item
correctly comp.letes the introductory statement.
(Be careful to make your judgments in terms of the
data given in the description of the experiment.)
112

Substance X acted upon the animals of group A as if it were a

40. poison.
41. destroyer of poisons.
42. stimulator causing animals of group A to produce destroyers of
the bacterial poison.

With reference to its effect upon the animals of group B, substance X


appeared to act as
43. a means of counteracting the effects of the disease-producing
bacteria.
44. if it were a destroyer of the bacteria or of their poi.sonous
products.
45. if it were a poisonous product of the bacteria.

Ten months after the series of injections described above, the scientist
prepared serum from the blood of the animals of group B. He injected
this serum into each of a large group (group C) of animals infected with
the disease. A control group, also infected with the disease, was given
no serum. There was a higher percentage of prompt recoveries in
group C than in the control group.
Serum from the animals of group B acted in the anima.ls of group C to
46. stimulate the animals of group C to produce a destroyer of the
disease-producing bacteria or their poisonous products.
47. destroy the disease 0 producing bacteria or their poisonous prod-
ucts.
48. hasten the deleterious effects of the disease-producing bacteria
upon animals of group C.
113

"Supply and demand are determined in large part by the marginal


consumers and marginal producers. If a tax is levied only an nonmar-
ginal producers it does not materially increase the costs of production
of the marginal producers, and does not, therefore, greatly influence
the price to the pub.lic. In other words, the tax in such a case cannot
readily be shifted. A tax an net income is such a tax. Those who have
no net income are not taxed and their costs of production are not in-
creased. They continue to produce at no increase in costs. lt is their
costs that determine primarily the price of the product. Those who pay
the tax an net income, being nonmarginal producers, find it impossible
or exceedingly difficult to pass the tax on to the consumers in the form
of higher prices.

"A sales tax, on the other hand, does raise the costs of production
of the marginal producers, causing them to withdraw from production
unless the tax can be shifted in the form of higher prices to the con-
sumer. lf some withdraw from production, the supply will decrease
and the price will increase sufficiently to absorb the sales tax. "
--Quoted from Introduction to Social Science
by Atteberry, Auble, Hunt, and others.

After the item number on the answer sheet, blacken space


A- if the item is true and its truth is supported by information
given in the paragraph.
B- if the item is true, but its truth is not supported by information
given in the paragraph. -- - -
C- if the item is false and its falsity is supported by information
given in the paragraph.
D- if the item is false, but its falsity is not supported by informa-
tion given in the paragraph.
49. Marginal producers are less affected by a sales tax than by an
income tax.
50. Nonmarginal producers find it difficult to pass a tax an net income
an to the consumer in the form of higher prices, because consum-
ers will then buy largely from marginal producers.
51. An income tax has less effect an prices than a sales tax.
52. Taxes an luxuries can be more readily shifted to the consumer
than taxes an necessities.
53. The two paragraphs assume conditions of free competition.
54. Marginal producers pay no tax on net income.
55. Nonmarginal producers can pass a sales tax to consumers in the
form of higher prices, because the marginal producers must also
raise prices or withdraw from competition.
56. A decrease in price has the same effect an marginal consumers
that it has an marginal producers.
114

An anthropologist wishes to discover whether there are intelligence dif-


ferences between white people and Negroes. He administers a standard
group intelligence lest to all of the students in alternate grades of a
small town school system which includes a public junior college. His
results are presented in the following table:
White students Negro students
Grade No. taking test Ave. 1. Q. No. taking test Ave. I.Q.
1 300 103 75 85
3 275 99 60 90
5 260 101 35 105
7 240 108 20 11.5
H.S. Soph. 215 115 10 125
H.S. Senior 200 120 8 135
J.C. 2nd yr. 100 125 3 145

On the basis of the data in this table, the anthropologist formulates a


nu:mber of conclusions. Some of these are given below, together with
possible comments which might have been made by consulting scientists
called in to evaluate his work. For each of these numbered conclusions,
blacken the answer space corresponding to the one comment which might
appropriately be made in such an evaluation.

57. Some Negroes are more intelligent than mc;>st people.


A- This conclusion is valid.
B- This is probably true, but one cannot be sure, because the
Negroes included in the study are a sel~cted group.
C- This is probably true, but one cannot be sure, because both
Negroes and whites included in the study are a selected group.
D- This is probably untrue, since the average I.Q. for 1st grade
Negroes is 18 points lower than for 1st grade whites.
E- The comparison is valid only if there are no real qualitative
differences between the white and Negro mind.

58. Before beginning schooling, Negro children in this community are


less intelligent than white children.
A- This conclusion is valid.
B- This conclusion is valid, provided the children who enter first
grade are typical of the children of each race.
C- This conclusion is valid provided the children who enter first
grade are typical of the children of each race, and provided
the items on the test do not really measure skills which white
children have a better chance to learn.
D- This conclusion is valid, provided the children who enter first
grade are typical of the children of each race, and provided
some Negroes were included in the group originally used in
standardizing the test.

Note: The original series included seven more exercises relevant to the
data given above.
115
59.
The first paragraph below is quoted from an inaugural address by
Thomas Jefferson; the second paragraph is taken from one of the essays
in The Federalist, written by Alexander Hamilton. Read these quota-
tions for the purpose of identifying the major controversial issue inher--
ent in them. Then write abrief essay in which you indicate the current
importance and implications of this issue.

"About to enter, fellow-citizens, on the exercise of duties which com-


prehend everything dear and valuable to you, it is proper you should
understand what I deem the essential principles of our Government, and
consequently those which ought to shape its Administration. I will com-
press them within the narrowest compass they will bear, stating the
general principle, but not all its limitations. Equal and exact justice
to all men, of whatever state or persuasion, religious or political;
peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations, entangling
alliances with none; the support of the State governments in all their
rights, as the most competent administrations for our domestic con-
cerns and the surest bulwarks against anti-republican tendencies; the
preservation of the General Government in its whole constitutional
vigor, as the sheet anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad; a
jealous care of the right of election by the people--a mild and safe cor-
rective of abuses which are lopped by the sword of revolution where
peaceable remedies are unprovided; absolute acquiescence in the deci-
sions of the majority, the vital principle of republics, from which is no
appeal but to force, the vital principle and immediate parent of despot-
ism; a well-disciplined militia, our best reliance in peace and for the
first moments of war, till regulars may relieve them; the supremacy
of the civil over the military authority; economy in the public expense,
that labor may be lightly burthened; the honest payment of our debts
and sacred preservation of the public faith; encouragement of agricul-
ture, and of commerce as its handmaid; the diffusion of information
and arraignment of all abuses at the bar of the public reason; freedom
of the press; the freedom of person under the protection of the habeas
corpus, and trial by juries impartially selected. These principles
form the bright constellation which has gone before us and guided our
steps through an age of revolution and reformation."

II

"The result of these observations to an intelligent mind must be clearly


this, that if it be possible at any rate to construct a federal government
capable of regulating the common concerns, and preserving the general
tranquillity, it must be founded, as to the objects committed to its care,
upon the reverse of the principle contended for by the opponents of the
proposed constitution. lt must carry its agency to the persons of the
citizens. lt must stand in need of no intermediate legislations; but must
itself be empowered to employ the arm of the ordinary magistrate to
execute its own resolutions. The majesty of the national authority must
be manifested through the medium of the courts of justice. The govern-
ment of the union, like that of each state, must be able to address itself
immediately to the hopes and fears of individuals; and to attract to its
116

support those passions which have the strongest influence upon the
human heart. lt must, in short, possess all the means, and have a
right to resort to all the methods, of executing the powers with which
it is entrusted, that are possessed and exercised by the governments
of the particular states. "
60,
The following selection from the writings of Descartes contains his
explanations of certain phenomena. State which of his explanations are
still accepted as valid, and indicate which of his explanations are no
longer accepted, pointing out briefly how they have been modified.

"Those who have acquired even the minimum of medical knowledge


know how the heart is composed, and how all the blood in the veins can
easily flow from the vena cava into its right side and from thence into
the lung by the vessel we term the arterial vein, and then return from
the lung into the left side of the heart, by the vessel called the venous
artery, and finally pass from there into the great artery, whose branches
spread throughout all the body . . . . We know that all movements of
the muscles, as also all the senses, depend on the nerves, which re-
semble small filaments, or little tubes, which all proceed from the
brain, and thus contain like it a certain very subtle air or wind whi.ch
is called the animal spirits .... So long as we live there is a continual
heat in our heart, which is a species of fire which 'the blood of the veins
there maintains, and this fire is the corporeal principle of all the move-
ments of our members .... lts first effect is to dilate (expand) the blood
with which the cavities of the heart are fil.led; that causes this blood,
which requires a greater space for its occupation, to pass into the great
artery; then when this dilaÜon (expansion) ceases, new blood immedi-
ately enters from the vena cava into the right cavity of the heart, and
from the venous artery into the left cavity .... The new blood which has
entered into the heart is t_hen immediately afterward rarefied (expanded)
in the same manner as that which preceded it; and it is just this which
causes the pulse, or beating of the heart and arteries; so that this beat-
ing repeats itse.lf as often as the new blood enters the heart. lt is also
just this which gives its motion to the blood, and causes it to flow
ceaselessly and very quickly in all the arteries and veins, whereby
it carries the heat which it acquires in the heart to all parts of 1:he
body, and supplies them with nourishment. 11

61,
The cartoon strip reproduced below portrays an episode in the life of
Andy Gump. Write a paragraph in which you tel.l how you as a physi.-
ologist would explain Andy's reaction to the presence of the bear-.
117

Testing for extrapolation objectives, and illustrative test


items

lt is often effective to test for extrapolation while testing


ability to interpret through use of essay or objective exer-
cises of the type ear.lier described and illustrated. The ex-
ercises on extrapolation then attempt to determine whether
or not the student can go beyond the limits of the data or in-
formation given and make correct applications and exten-
slons of lhe data or ü:J:o:cma.tio:.:1.. lt is to be e;.::pcc~c-:! füat
the extrapolations will differ from the original in some of
the following respects:

A. Time dimension--if the data given contain trends


and tendencies within a given time range, the ex-
trapolation will represent an attempt to extend the
trends and tendencies to other time periods (includ-
ing time periods within a sequence).

B. Topic or domain--if the communication deals with


one topic or subject, the extrapolation may repre-
sent an attempt to extend the ideas to another topic
or situation which is relevant. This is more than
altering the form of the communication, since it
involves extending the ideas beyond the original
topic or subject.

C. Sample or universe--if the data deal with a sample,


the extrapolation may pertain to the universe from
which the sample is drawn. Conversely, if the
data pertain to a universe, the extrapolation may
pertain to a sample. For example, data may be
~iven with respect to the trends in production of
automobiles over a period of years, while the ex-
trapolation may pertain to the production of Ford
cars.
118
2. 30 Extrapolation

In the chart given below, amounts spent for any given state function all
read from the base line. For example, interest and retirement of the
state debt required the expenditure of 40 million dollars in 1938, rather
than 40 million minus 21.

22 0

20 0
~V -----
Total Expenditures Welfa~"'
18 OL-- ~ State of lllinois
1/
16
00
_,,,,. V
~ 140

~
,.__ / Educatio~

7 - - - ---
12 1,.,--"'
~ 0~
1 -
.....§ 10
a 0~
/ _ l/4"ghways
~
8

60
0~
/
V-- --........ t-- - 1
1n~f!mft~e1>ttirement
40

2 0,-
All other purposes
0
29 30 31 32 33 34 35 37 37 38 39 40
Fiscal Years ending June 30

After the number on the answer sheet corresponding to that of each


statement, blacken space
A if the information given in the chart is sufficient for a
judgment that the statement is definitely true.
B if the information given in the chart is sufficient only to
indicate that the statement is probably true.
C if the information given in the chart is not sufficient to
indicate any degree of truth or falsity in the statement.
D if the information given in the chart is sufficient for a
judgment that the statement is probably false.
E if the information given in the chart is sufficient for a
judgment that the statement is definitely false.

62. Less money was spent in 1930 than before 1929 for. welfare and
education.
63. In 1931 and 1932 the expenditure of money for highway purposes was
evidently considered a means of combatting the depression.
64. Had our country not entered the war in 1941, expenditures for wel-
fare in 1942 would have been greater than in 1940.
65. In 1940 a much greater proportion of the total expenditures were
for welfare than in 1942.
66. The increasing amount of money spent by the State for all purposes
between 1929 and 1940 must have come from sources other than
borrowing.
119

67. Lees money was spent by the State in 1930 than in 1929 almost
wholly because of retrenchment with respect to highway expen-
ditures.
68. Less money was spent for highways in 1931 than in 1932.
69. Unemployment increased in the State between 1937 and 1939.
70. Increase in expenditures from 1929 to 1940 has been the least in
those classified under interest and retirement of State debt.
71. The per capita expenditures of IDinois cities for welfare and for
education parallel the State expenditures for these two purposes.
72. The total expenditures of the State in 1940 exceeded one-half
billion dollars.
7 3. The State debt increased little between 1933 and 1940 as compared
to expenditures for education.

This is an example in which translation, int.erpretation, and extrapola-


tion are all included, Items 62, 64, 65, 69, and 71 are examples of
extrapolation. Item 71 is an example of extrapolating from universe to
sample.

74, Contrast the kinds of interpretation one can make from frequency
polygons or histograms and smoothed curves drawn from the same
distribution of test scores obtained from a sample of eighth grade
pupils.

75, The ratios of employed persons to unemployed are given for each
year over an interval of several years. Why is such data inade-
quate in revealing the employment status of auto-workers, lumber-
men, harvest hands, and calendar salesmen?

76, Immigrants tend to settle in the slum areas closest to the central
business districts of our large cities. Where are their descend-
ants most likely to be found?
3. 00 APPLICATION

The whole cognitive domain of the taxonomy is ar-


ranged in a hierarchy, that is, each classüication within
it demands the skills and abilities which are lower in the
classification order .. The a.ppli.cation category follows this
rule in that to apply something requires "Comprehension"
of the method, theory, principle, or abstraction applied.
Teachers frequently say, "If a student really comprehends
something, then he can apply it." To make the distinction
between the "Comprehension" and "Application" categories
clear, we have described it in two ways.

One way of looking at the distinction is this. A prob-


lern in the comprehension category requires the student to
know an abstraction well enough that he can correctly dem-
onstrate its use when specüically asked to do so. "Appli-
cation," however, requires a step beyond this. Given a
problem new to the student, he will apply the appropriate
abstraction without having to be prompted as to which ab-
straction is correct or without having to be shown how to
use it in that situation. A demonstration of "Comprehen-
sion" shows that the student can use the abstraction when
its use is specüied. A demonstration of "Application"
shows that he will use it correctly, given an appropriate
situation in which no mode of solution is specified.

A second way of looking at this is demonstrated in


Figure I. lt shows in diagrammatic form the problem -
solving process of answering questions classüied in the
"Application" category. In the complete solution of an "Ap-
plication" problem, all 6 steps are involved. Whether the
pr-ocess more closely resembles the left or right side of the
chain at steps 1 and 2 would depend upon the student's fami-
liarity with the problem. Steps 1 through 4 are part of "Ap-
plication" but not of "Comprehension. " Comprehension is
best represented by a problem which starts with step 5,
steps 1-4 being unnecessary because of the structuring of
the problem situation.

120
121
Problem presented

Step 1
familiar elements

Student uses familiar Some restructuring by


Step 2 elements to restruc- student to make resem -
ture problem in a fa- blance to familiar mod-
miliar context el more complete

Classification of
Step 3 problem as familiar
in t pe

Selection of abstrac-
tion (theory, princi-
Step 4 ple, idea, method)
suitable to problem
t e

Use of abstraction to
Step 5 solve roblem

Step 6 Solution to problem

Figure 1
122

The Educational lmplications of Objectives in the Appli-


tion Category

The fact that most of what we learn is intended for ap-


lication to problem situations in real life is indicative of
the importance of application objectives in the general cur-
riculum. The effectiveness of a large part of the school
program is therefore dependent upon how weil the students
carry over into situations applications which the students
never faced in the learning process. Those of you familiar
with educational psychology will quick.ly recognize this as
the age-old problem of transfer of training. Research
studies have shown that comprehending an abstraction does
not certify that the individual will be able to apply it cor-
rect.ly. Students apparently also need practice in restruc-
turing and c.lassifying situations so that the correct abstrac-
tion applies ( steps 1-4 of Figure I).

For instance, Horrocks and Troyer constructed a test


whic-h measured knowledge of fact and principle about ado-
lescent development and three case study tests which mea-
sured the ability to apply the facts and principles of adoles-
cent development. The correlations between the tests of
knowledge and application (over 100 students) ranged from
. 31 to . 54 after they were corrected for attenuation, that
is, corrected for the chance errors which affected the re-
liability of tests used. Obviously, in this instance at least,
possession of knowledge and the ability to apply it are not
synonymous. 1

Many other studies in this area can be found. The gen-


eral con sensus seems to be that training will transfer to
new areas most readily if the person is taught in such a way
that he learns good methods of attacking problems, if he
learns concepts and generalizations ( rather than how to use
certain facts in specific instances ), if he .learns proper at-
titudes toward work, and if he develops proper attitudes of
self-confidence and control. lt is obvious that the objectives in

1 John E. Horrocks, 11 The Relationship between Knowledge


of Human Development and the Use of Such Knowledge,"
Journal~ Applied Psychology, 30, (1946), 501-507.
123

the application category, as they embody the meaning of


transfer of training, are extremely important aspects of the
curriculum. Further, the evaluation of the extent to which
the application outcomes are being achieved becomes one of
the most important aspects of the entire evaluation process.
For, to the extent that the evaluation process gives the
schools information concerning success or failure in this
aspect of the curriculum, evaluation provides a feedback
for future curricular revis10n. Such feedback is of the ut-
most importancc as a basis for appropriate revision of thc
educational process.
124

3. 00 Application -- Illustrative Educational Objectives

Looking over collections of teachers' objectives leads


to the generalization that objectives in the application area
sound very much alike, regardless of the subject matter
involved. For this reason only a few examples are given
below. No examples are given from the humanities field
since the only examples that could be found used application
of a principle as only a part (often minor) of a process,
e. g., as in creating a piece of artwork (synthesis) or judg-
ing a piece of artwork (evaluation).

Application to the phenomena discussed by a paper, of


the scientific terms and concepts used in other papers.

The abi.lity to apply social science generalizations and


conclusions to actual social problems.

The ability to predict the probable effect of a change in


a factor on a biological situation previously at equili-
brium.

The abi.lity to apply science principles, postulates,


theorems, or other abstractions to new situations.

Employing experimental procedures in finding the


solutions to problems and the answers to questions in
making home repairs.

Apply principles of psychology in identifying the char-


acteristics of a new social situation.

The ability to relate principles of civil liberties and


civil rights to current events.

Skill in applying principles of democratic group action


to participation in group and social situations.

The ability to apply the laws o.f trigonometry to


practical Situations.

To develop some skill in applying Mendel's laws of


inheritance to experimental findings on plant genetic
problems.
125
Testing for Application, and illustrative test items

Experience in testing for application behavior has


shown that several factors must be routinely taken into
consideration. Some of them are as follows:

Need for new yet real items

lf the situations described by the objective or by the


testing situation are to involve application as we are defin-
ing H here, then they must either be situations new to the
student or situations containing new elements as compared
to the situation in which the abstraction was learned. lf
the Situations presented the student to test 11 application"
are old ones in which he originally learned the meaning of
the abstraction, the student does not have to "apply" the
abstraction. Rather, he needs merely to recall the original
situation in which he learned the abstraction, a behavior
herein classified as knowledge or a level in comprehension.
This is likely to mean that the prob.lern must either (a) be
posed in a situation which is fictional, (b) be one which is
drawn from material with which the student is not likely to
have yet had contact, or (c) be on a prob.lern known to the
student but a new slant that he is unlikely to have thought of
previously. Ideally we are seeking a problem which will
test the extent to which the individual has learned to apply
the abstraction in a practical way. This means that the
problems should have some re.lation to the situations in
which he may ultimately be expected to apply the abstrac-
tions. The kinds of problems that come from the three
above sources do not always meet this criterion. To the
extent that fictional problem situations--(a) above--are un-
real, contrary to fact, or bizarre they do not seem as likely
to elicit valid behavior as Situations of a more common and
realistic nature. Situations drawn from material with which
the student is not yet .likely to have had contact--(b) above--
are usually drawn from advanced material and simplified
for use in an earlier grade. lt is frequently difficult to suf-
ficiently simplify the situations and yet retain their reality.
Further, the bright student often blocks this source of
new situations by having read ahead or done outside reading,
and so familiarized himse.lf and sometimes his playmates
with them. The new slant on common situations--(c) above--
probably represents our most suitable source of new, yet
realistic items. They are, however, extremely hard to
126

devise. The PEA Application of Principles Test used this


source of items.

General problem-solving ability vs. application of specific


principles

lf one is teaching a particular body of principles and


wishes to evaluate the effect of this instruction, one is inter-
ested not so much in the extent to which the student solves
the problem by common sense or the use of comm.on.ly known
information, but rather in the extent to which the student has
directly benefited from the specific learning situations used,
Problems which within themselves contain clues as to how
they should be solved ( such clues being interpretable by
someone with little or no specialized knowledge) would not
test application of the principles one has taught. One can
determine the extent to which the test is not evaluating as
desired by administering the items to persons who have
not undergone the instruction in the area taught but who,
nevertheless, are persons equal in general ability to those
for whom the application items are designed.

Diagnosing failure on application problems

As is true of any test result, the indication that a stu-


dent is unable to solve application problems may result
from a number of causes besides the one that the student
has failed to learn to apply. Failure on a problem may re -
sult from (a) not correctly comprehending the problem ab-
straction, (b) choosing the wrong abstraction, (c) incorrectly
using the abstraction in the situation, or (d) incorrectly
interpreting the results of using the abstraction in the situa-
tion. lt is important to distinguish inability to comprehend.
This may be easily determined by testing the extent to
which the student is comprehending the situation before he
attempts the application items. Determination of the point
of failure as other than failure to comprehend (b, c, or d
above) requires that a sufficient record of the student's
problem-solving behavior be kept to allow location of the
breakdown point. lt is impossible and unnecessary for us
to record every thought that occurs to the student in the
solution of the problem. In general, it is sufficient to pro-
vide opportunity for the student to record his preference at
each choice point in the solution to the problem through hav-
ing him describe or actually record his thoughts at that
127

point. If complete diagnosis is sought only on a few cases,


having the student solve the problem aloud while an observer
takes notes will get this information. If the cases are
carefully chosen so as to be representative of the group,
this latter technique will prove very feasible and economical
for diagnosing the major troubles of the group as a whole.
The technique is of great aid in the revision of the test items
to make them more valid and to find choice points that should
be recorded.

Providing opportunity for recording choice points sounds


easy but is frequently very difficult in practice. Its implica-
tion is that we can anticipate all the correct as well as al-
ternative problem-solving processes of the students. To
avoid this, test constructors have tried to construct items
which were so structured that by analyzing the student 1s
answer one could infer the problem-solving process which
the student used. That is, each distractor in a problem can
be so phrased that it can be reached only by one set of prob-
lem-solving steps. By knowing the ans wer choice the Student
made we would then know the method he used to solve the
problem. Verbal problem solving, in general, has shown
that the types of items and variety of subject matter in
which this technique can be successfully used are few.
Although it may appear that the process can be inferred,
studies usually show that students can come up with ways
of arriving at answers, often correct, that no teacher
seems to have anticipated. When accurate knowledge of
process is required, actual recording of the student's
problem-solving processes can be considered generally
preferable in the majority of cases to inference from the
product. 2

2 The recently developed "Tab ltem" technique is an


attempt to do this. In a letter to the editor, Robert Glaser
has described the Tab Item:
"A Tab Item presents an examinee with the fo.llow-
ing: a description of a problem situation; a series
of diagnostic procedures which, if employed, might
yield information relevant to solving the prob.lern;
and a list ofspecific solutions, one ofwhich is cor-
rect. In taking the test an examinee selects any
number of the procedures presented which he thinks
128

Adequate sampling of application

We have stated that we wish to sample a student's be-


havior at severa.l points in his application of abstraction to
a problem situation but have not mentioned the obvious
corollary that we should also sample the student's behavior
over several prob.lern situations. This is a general rule
of testing and is another way of achieving what we commonly
call "test reliability." lt is, however, of particular
importance with respect to appl. ication items. Si.nce these
items are often felt to be so difficult to construct, the use
of a single prob.lern situation to make generalizations about
an individual is fairly common. Since the student's ability
may often clearly be a function of the particular situation
used, the necessity for taking a sample of situations is
apparent.

will provide him with information necessary to solve


theproblem. The resulting information from what-
ßVer procedures the examinee chooses are given to
him at the time he selects them. This is accom-
plished by giving the results or consequences of a
procedure in the form of written or diagrammatic
informaUon, which is covered by a tab fastened to
the page. When the examinee selects a procedure
he rips off the tab and obtains the results of the pro-
cedure he has 1performed'. In a like manner an
examinee is informed of the correctness or incor-
rectness of his choice of a solution. An examinee
works on an item until he finds the correct solu-
tion, denoted by the word 'yes' under the corres-
ponding tab. 11
Glaser, R.; Damrin, D. E.; and Gardner, F. M. "The Tab
Item: A Technique for the Measurement of Proficiency in
Diagnostic ProblemSolving Tasks, 11 Champaign: Univer-
sity of lllinois, College of Education, Bureau of Research
and Service, June 1952.
129

Types of items illustrated

Major variations occur both in the kinds of situations


posed, and in the extent and nature of the behavior requested
in application items.

Behavio1·. The major variations in behavior involve varia-


tions in the extent to which the student is required to carry
through the application process, and variations in the extent
to which the student's problem-solving processes are re-
corded. These variations seem to occur most commonly
in the following patterns:

1) A recording of the choice of correct principle(s) is


requested and its use in the prob.lern is tobe dem-
onstrated. Practically the whole application pro-
cess is on record.

2) The prob.lern solution is requested and the process


of application is to be demonstrated and recorded.
The student's selection of the abstraction(s) is in-
ferred from the nature of the process and solution
he displays.

3) The complete or partial problem solution alone is


requested and recorded. The selection and applica-
tion of the abst raction(s) is entirely covert and un-
recorded. They are inferred from the nature of the
solution he presents. In some instances where only
the solution is requested, if the solution is a complex
one, it is sometimes difficult to determine whether
the individual actually has applied the abstraction
correct.ly so that the whole solution is correct. In
these instances the extent of the student's solution and
its correctness is sometimes exp.lored by asking the
student to indicate the implications of it.
130

4) Selection of the correct abstraction is alone requested


and recorded. If a phenomenon is tobe explained, the
correct application of the abstraction is generally as-
sumed to accompany a correct selection.. Although
merely naming the abstraction is not usually a suffi-
cient test of ability to use the abstraction correctly,
problems requiring only the selection of the correct
abstraction can be used when the abstraction and its
application are simple and the problem's chief diffi-
culty lies in selecting the correct abstraction.

Situation. As noted earlier, the emphasis in writing appli-


cation items is on getting Situations new to the student. This
is done by

A) presenting a fictional situation,

B) using material with which the student is not likely


to have had contact. Such situations are frequently
simplified versions of complex material which
would ordinarily come considerably later in the
course of study ( classification of an item as of
this type is dependent entirely upon the group to
whom it is administered),

C ) taking a new slant on situations which to the group


being tested are common and niundane. In highly
technical areas, "common" problems may appear
very uncommon to an outsider.
131

3,00 - APPLICATION -- ILLUSTRATIVE TEST ITEMS

Behavior. This adaptation of a PEA item requires the


student to se.lect the appropriate principles and extrap-
olate beyond the situation given. The principle must
be drawn from memory in this essay type item.
(Type 1)

Situation. The situation, while probably not within the


direct experience of all, is at least within their vicari-
ous· experience. lt could be considered as a new slant
on a fairly common phenomenon. (Type C)

1. John prepared an aquarium as follows: He carefully cleaned a


ten-gallon glase tank with salt solution and put in a few inches of fine
washed sand. He rooted several stalks of weed (elodea) taken from a
pool and then filled the aquarium with tap water. After waiting a week
he stocked the aquarium with ten one-inch goldfish and three snails.
The aquarium was then left in a corner of the room. After a month
the water had not become foul and the plante and animals were in good
condition. Without moving the aquarium he sealed a glass top on it.

What prediction, if any, can be made concerning the condition of


the aquarium after a period of several months? lf you believe a defi-
nite prediction can be made, make it and then give your reasons. lf
you are unable to make a prediction for ~ reason, indicate why you
are unable to make a prediction (give your reasons). 3

3 Adapted from Test 1. 3B, "Application of Principles in Science,"


Progressive Education Association, Evaluation in the Eight-Year
Study, University of Chicago, 1940.
132
Behavior. This PEA item is an attempt to get a record of the major
aspects of the process of application but yet to use an objective
test item form. The item form reverses the expected problem-
solving procedure in that the student states his solution and then ra-
tiona.lizes it by choosing principles to support it. (Type 1)
Situation. This is a different way of looking at a common phenome-
non for most students. (T e C)

Problem VI from PEA Test 1. 3, Application of Principles

2. An electric iron (110 vo.lts, 1000 watts) has been used for some
time and the plug contacts have become burned, thus introdudng addi-
tional resistance. How will this affect the amount of heat which the
iron produces?

Directions: Choose the conclusion which you believe is most con-


sistent with the facts given above and most reasonable in the light of
whatever knowledge you may have, and mark the appropriate space on
the Answer Sheet under Problem VI.

Conclusions:
A. The iron will produce more heat than when new.
B. The iron will produce the same heat as when new.
C. The iron will produce less heat than when new.

Directions: Choose the reasons you would use to explain or support


your conc.lusion and fill in the appropriate spaces on your Answer Sheet,
Be sure that your marks are in one column only--the same column in
which you marked the conclusion.

Reasons:
1. The heat produced by an electrical device is always measured by
its power rating. lt is independent of any contact resistance.
2. Electric currents of the same voltage always produce the same
amount of heat, and burned contacts do not decrease the amount
of electricity entering the iron.
3. The current which flows through the iron is reduced when the re-
sistance is increased.
4. Increasing the resistance in an. electrical circuit increases the
current.
5. An increase in electrical resistance increases the heat developed.
6. Manufacturers of electric irons urge that the contacts be kept
clean to maintain maximum efficiency.
7·. An increase in the temperature of a wire usually results in an
increase in its resistance.
8. Burned contacts increase the heat developed in an electric iron
just as increasing the friction in automobile brakes develops
more heat.
9. The heat developed by an electric iron when connected to 110
volts is independent of the flow of current.
133
Behavior. In the following problem both the solution and
process of application are requested. The student's cor-
rect selection of the abstraction, in this case a method of
solving this type of problem, is inferred from the process
and the solution he displays. (Type 2)

Situation. The problem situations are fictional and prob-


ably not realistic from the stanclpoint of most of the groups
which would be tested. If this problem or one just like it
had been solved in classwork, this would be a comprehen~
sion rather than an application item. (T e A)

3. X and Y can do a piece of work together in 15 days. They work


together for 6 days; then X quits and Y finishes the work in 30 more
days. In how many days can Y do the piece of work alone? Show your
werk below.
(a) 30
(b) 40
(c) 50
(d) 60
(e) none of the foregoing

Behavior. This item is similar to the preceding item in


terms of the way that it tests application. In this instance
the abstraction being tested is a formula relating the area
to the length and width of a rectangle. (Type 2)

Situation. The problem is fictional. As noted in regard to


the preceding item, if too close to the problems used in
class, it would test comprehension rather than application.
(T e A)

4. The .length of a rectangular lot exceeds its breadth by 20 yards. If


each dimension is increased by 20 yards the area of the lot will be
doubled. Find the shorter dimension of the original lot. Show your work
be.low.
(a) 20
(b) 30
(c) 35
(d) 40
(e) none of the foregoing
134
Behavior. The student must recall the principles of ecology and
apply the appropriate ones to the situations named in the item.
Only the solution is requested. (Type 3)

Situation. The situations are real but the student ts not likely to
be familiar with them._ (Type CL.)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

5. After the number on the answer sheet corresponding to that pre-


ceding each of the following paired items, blacken space
A- if increase in the first of the things referred to is usually ac-
companied by increase in the second.
B- if increase in the first of the things referred to is usually ac-
companied by decrease in the second.
C- if increase in the first of the things referred to has no appre-
ciable effect on the second.
l. Number of lemming in an Arctic habitat.
Number of caribou in the same habitat.

2. Number of lichens in an Arclic habitat.


Number of caribou in the same habitat.
3. Amount of carbonates disso.lved in the water of a river.
Number of clams in the river.
4. Temperature of the environment of a mammal.
Body temperature of the mammal.

5. Compactness of the soll of a given area.


Amount of water absorption by the soil after a heavy rain.

6. Frequency of fire in a given coniferous forest.


Number of aspen trees in the forest.
7. Crop yield per acre of farrnland cultivated in lllinois.
Arnount of soil nutrients per acre of farrnland.
8. The altitude of the environment of an animal.
Ext ent to which the circulating red blood cells of the animal
undergo mitosis.

9. Extent of tree planting activity on forest land in the United


States.
Degree of water absorption by the soil per unit of area of
the same land.
10. Amount of vegetation per square yard of soi.l.
Arnount of available nitrate salts in the same area of seil.

11. Arnount of humus accumulated in sand during dune succession.


Abundance of animal .life in the area.
135
Behavior. In this item the student is to judge the implications of ap-
plying a given policy for the distribution of income. The policy situ-
ation is given and the implication alone is asked for. The principles
involved and their use in determining the implications must be in-
ferred from the student's choice. (Type 3)

Situation. The situation is fictional in that the setting of the problem


is abstract and the student is presented with a simplified economic
situation where onl one variable at a time is changed. (Type A)

6,, Directions: In the following items you are to judge the effects of a
particular policy on the distribution of income. In each case assume
that there are no other changes in policy which would counteract the ef-
fect of the policy described in the item. Mark the item:

A- if the policy described would tend to reduce the existing degree


of inequality in the distribution of income;
B- if the policy des.cribed would tend to increase the existing de -
gree of inequality in the distribution of income; or
C- if the policy described would have no effect, or an indetermi-
nate effect, on the distribution of income.

Items:

1. Increasingly progressive income taxes.

2. Confiscation of rent on unimproved urban land.

3. Introduction of a national sales tax.

4. lncreasing the personal exemptions from income taxes.

5. Distributing a subsidy to sharecroppers on Southern


farms.

6. Provision of educational and medical services, and low


cost public housing.

7. Reduction in the degree of business monopoly.

8. lncreasing taxes in periods of prosperity and decreasing


them in periods when depressions threaten.
136
Behavior. The student is asked to find the solution. Correct selectior
and use of the appropriate principle is inferred from the solution.
(Type 3)

Situation. Strictly a fictional situation, but having a realistic-sounding


setting. (Type A)

7. Suppose an elevator is descending with a constant acceleration of


gravity "g". If a passenger attempts to throw a rubber ball upward,
what will be the motion of the ball with respect to the elevator? The
ball will
1. remain fixed at the point the passenger releases it.
2. rise to the top uf the elevalor a.ud 1·emain there.
3. not rise at all, but will fall to the floor.
4. rise, bounce off the ceiling, then move toward the floor at a
constant speed.
5. rise, bounce off the ceiling, then move toward the floor at an
increasing speed.

Behavior. Here one can test both the correct selection and use of the
abstra ction since the problem is to explain a phenomenon. (Type 4)

/>ituation. A common problem is used. (Type C)

Directions: The underlined statement at the end of the problem is as-


sumed tobe a correct answer. You are to explain the underlined con-
clusion by selecting statements from the list following the problem.
(The student checks the explanations.)

8. If a person is planning to bathe in the sun, at-what time of day is


he most likely to receive a severe sunburn? He is most likely to re-
ceive a severe sunburn in the middle of the day (11 a. m. to 1 p. m.)
because:
( ) We are slight.ly closer to the sun at noon than in the morning
or afternoon.
The noon sun will produce more "burn" than the morning or
afternoon sun.
When the sun's rays fall directly (straight down) on a surface,
rnore energy is received by that surface than when the sun's
rays fall obliquely on that surface.
( ) When the sun is directly overhead the sun's rays pass through
less absorbing atmosphere than when the sun is lower in the
sky.
The air is usually warmer at noon than at other times of the
day.
The ultraviolet of the sunlight is rnainly responsible for sun-
burn. 4

4 Taken from Inventory 1. 5, Analyzing Health Problems; Coopera-


tive Study in General Education. Atnerican Council on Education, Uni-
versity of Chicago, 1941.
137

Behavior. The student must recall the principles of solar


and planetary movement and apply them to each of the re -
sponse possibilities to determine whether the problem sit-
uation might be a resultant. Only the solution need be re-
corded. (Type 3)

Situation. Fictional. (Type A)

9, You have acquired some knowledge of the earth and its motions as
they really exist. In this exercise you are to identify the effects of
some wholly imaginary conditions. After each item number on the
answer sheet bla.cken space
A- if the item would be true if the earth were not inclined on
its axis.
B- if the item would be true if the orbit of the earth were a circle
rather than an ellipse.
C- if the item would be true if the earth revolved toward the west
rather than toward the east.
D- if the item would be true if the earth had half its present diame-
ter but retained its present mass.
E- if the item would be true if the earth had no moon.

Assume only one of the above imaginary conditions occurs at a time.

1. All the solar days would be of equal length.

2. Objects woulci weigh four times as much as they do now.

3. The celestial equator and the ecliptic would be identical.

4. The sun would set in the east.

5. A different North Star would need to be chosen.

6. The force of gravity would be four times as great.

7. The orbital speed of the earth would not vary during the year.

8. We would know much less about the nature of the sun.

9. Night and day would be of equal length in all latitudes


all year long.
138
When an Thursday, February 8, 1951 a Chicagoan, Mrs. Dorothy
Mae Stevens, was found unconscious in a passageway after a night of
exposure to 11 degree subzero weather, "she was literally frozen stiff."

Her temperature had dropped to an unprecedented 64 degrees (Fahr-


enheit). Twenty hours after her arrival at Michael Reese Hospital, her
temperature had risen to 98. 2 degrees. Early Friday it was 101 and lat-
er 1 00. On Saturday it was also 100.

When she was first found, her respiration was slowed to 3 a min-
ute. By Saturday it was up to 24 a minute.

Her blood pressure was zero on Thursday. By Saturday it was


132 over 80. On Thursday her pulse rate was 12 a minute; on Saturday
it was 100. Cortisone was administered early.

Behavior. This item requests solution and the princi-


ple used. {Type 1)

Situation. At the time the item was written Mz·s. Stevens'


case was headline news. The item assumes that the stu-
dent has not previously thought about these aspects of the
case. (T e C)

10. At a body temperature of 64 degrees

A- the b.lood carries more oxygen to the cells than normally, be-
cause more gases dissolve in fluids at low temperatures
rather than at high temperatures.
B- the blood vessels of the skin are dilated, because the vasocon-
strictor muscles are relaxed.
C- the heart beats more rapidly, because the cold sti.mulates the
heart center in the medulla.
D- most activities slow down, because all chemical activities
decrease as the temperature falls.

Behavior. Only the solution is requested, the abstrac-


tion used must be inferred from the student's choice.
{Type 3)
Situation. See previous problem.

11. The immediate cause of Mrs. Stevens' unconsciousness was


probably due to the

A- lack of a sufficient amount of oxygen to the brain cells.


B- lowering of the external temperature.
C- slow pulse rate.
D- decrease in muscle tone.
E- low breathing rate.
139

Behavior. The solution alone is requested. (Type 3)

Situation. See first problem of this series.

12. When Mrs. Stevens was found in subzero weather her heart was
beating
A- 12 times a minute.
B- 3 times a minute.
C- 0 times a minute.
D- the normal number of times a minute, but not with normal
vigor.
E- subnormally, but there is nothing·in the article to indicate
how many times.

Behavior. The student must determine the principles in-


volved in the production of steam which might apply to
each of the distractors. He then determines whether this
is realistic insofar as the situation is concerned. This
leads him to a choice. An aspect of the solution is re-
quested. (Type 3)

Situation. A realistic situation probably not previously


considered b the student. (T e C)

After each exercise number on the answer sheet, blacken the one
lettered space which designates the correct ans wer.

13. When a geyser first begins to erupt, hot water overf.lows at the
orifice and this is followed by a rush of steam, mingled with hat water.
The first overflow of hat water aids in the production of steam, because

A- less water needs to be heated.


B- more water can seep into the fissure from the surrounding
rocks.
C- the higher the pressure, the greater the steam produced.
D- the lower the pressure, the lower the temperature at which
steam is produced.
E- the water which overflows is necessarily below 212° F. in
temperature.
140

Behavior. Proper application of the operating principles of certain


bodily mechanisms permits the student to predict the direction and
amount of change which will result from each of the two experiments.
(Type 3)

Situation. This is a fictional experiment which is so devised that i t


permits the demonstration of certain principles. (Type A)
14.
Experiment A; Anormal person is seated inside a small airtig'ht cham-
ber in which the air at the start of the experiment has a temperature of
72° F. and a relative humidity of 60. By means of a mask and pipes the
person breathes air drawn in from outside the chamber and the air he
exhales is also passed out of the chamber.

Experiment B: The same person is later seated outside of the same


chamber, but by means of the mask and pipes breathes air drawn from
the chamber and the air he exhales is also passed into the chamber. The
composition of the air, air pressure, temperature, and humidity were
the same outside and inside the chamber at the start of each of the ex-
periments.

After each item number on the answer sheet, blacken space


A- if the statement applies to Experiment A.
B- if the statement applies to Experiment B.
C- if the statement applies to neither Experiment A nor Experi-
ment B.

The rate and depth of breathing increase more rapidly in this experi-
ment than in the other experiment.

The rate and amount of perspiration increase more rapidly in this ex-
periment than in the other experiment.

The humidity and temperature of the air in the chamber increase more
rapidly in this experiment than in the other experiment.

The o2 concentration of the air in the chamber increases appreciably.

The C0 2 concentration of the air in the chamber increases appreciably.

The percentage of heat loss through evaporation decreases greatly.

The activity of the respiratory center of the medulla increases consid-


erably.

The activity of the respiratory center of the medulla decreases consid-


erably.

The number of impulses passing through the phrenic nerves in a given


unit of time increases considerably.

The number of impulses passing through the vagus nerves in a given


unit of time increases considerably.
141

Behavior. The student must determine the general principles which


operate in the situation described and then predict the most likely
event. (.Type 3)
Situation. A fictional situation. (Type A)
15. Mr. Golzak, Mr. A. F. Fell, Mrs. Hunter, and Boss Powers live
in Steel City.
Mr. Golzakwas born 60 years ago in Central Europe. Today Mr. Gol-
zak is one of Steel City's top business leaders. The Golzak family has
"arrived." Wealthy Mrs. Golzak dominates the social life of their
swank suburb, Mapledal e. Mr. Golzak, personnel manager for Amal-
gamated Steel, believes in "rugged individualism. 11 Personal freedom
allows ei,terpdsing men {such as himself) to achieve wealth ar.d posi··
tion, just as freedom from governmental restraint for business assures
national prosperity and a "full dinner pail" for all. Mr. Golzak believes
labor unions destroy workers' initiative and undermine business.
Mr. A. F. Fell was born in Steel City in a working-class neighborhood.
Like his father, Mr. Fell became a printer's apprentice at 16, and
then a life-long member of the International Typographical Workers
Union. He works as.a typesetter for the "Steel City Sentinel. 11 Mr. Fell
believes that management and labor should settle their differences en-
tirely between themselves by collective bargaining. Mr. Fell makes
$1. 90 per hour, owns his own harne and sends his children to the city
junior college. He believes his union has made this possible.
Mrs. Hunter is the wife of a steel workers. Mr. Hunter belongs to the
CIÖ. The Hunters and three other families share a "modest" harne
(owned by Mr. Golzak) three blocks downwind from the steel mill. Mrs.
Hunter attended a Southern school for Negroes for four years, off and
an. She has little understanding of social and economic problems, but
she worries over such personal problems as clothing for four growing
children, privacy in her own home, paying the butcher during the steel
strike, and Junior who "borrows" bicycles.
Boss Powers. slum-born son of an Irish saloon-keeper, learned con-
viviality early in life and led his gang against the Prairie Avenue Dukes.
Soon he was leading his Ward Organization against the Republicans.
Today he is unquestioned as Democratic Boss of Steel City. He enjoys
the fruits of victory.

1. A business recession would probably mean unemployment for


(A- the Fells and the Hunters; B- Boss Powers; C- the Hunters;
D- none of these).
2. Mr. Fell's home is probably (A- near the steel mill; B- in Maple-
dale; C- in the zone of transition; D- among twenty-year-old
single dwelling units).
3, A bill is before Congress to admit an additional 100,000 displaced
persons. Most likely to favor the bill is (A- Mr. Golzak, personnel
manager for Amalgamated Steel; B- Mrs. Hunter, wife of an un-
skilled laborer; C- Mr. Fell, skilled craftsman; D- Boss Powers,
son of an immigrant).
4. Mrs. Fell has chronic headaches although her doctor can find noth-
ing organically wrong with her. Her headaches are most probably
a result of (A- personal maladjustment; B- approaching insanity;
C- hidden germs; D- an inherited mental weakness).
142
Behavior. The student must app.ly the physics principle correctly
in each case. Only the so.lution is requested. (Type 3)
Situation. Fictional. (Type A)

.16, The numbers preceding the paired items in the exercise below refer
to the corresponding numbers on the answer sheet, Considering each
pair from the standpoint of quantity, blacken space
A- if the item at the left is greater than that a.t the right.
B- if the item at the right is greater than that at the left.
C- if the two items are of essentially the same magnitude.

Plane I

M 0

Two spheres, X and Y, of equal masses and radii, are p.laced on two in-
c.lined planes, as shown in the diagram. Neglect friction and air resist-
ance, and assume that potential energy is measured from the level of
points L, M, N, and 0.

1. Potential energy of X at F ......... . Potential energy of Y at H.


2, Potential energy of X at M, ........ . Potential energy of Y at N.
, 3. Potential energy of X at M ......... . Potential energy of X at L.
4. Kinetic energy of Xon rolling to L Kinetic energy of X on falling
to M.
5. Kinetic energy of X on rolling to L Kinetic energy of Y on rolling
to 0.
6. Work done on X in raising it from Work done on X in moving it
M to F ................. , ...... . from L to F.
7. Work done on X in raising it from Work done on Y in raising it
M to F .................. , ..... . from N to H.
8. Acce.leration of X in rolling down Acceleration of Y in rolling
incline toward L ................ . down incline toward 0,
9. Acceleration of X in falling ver- Acceleration of Y in fal.ling
tically toward M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vertically toward N.
10. Time it tak.es X to fall to M .. ...... . Time it takes Y to fall to N.
11. Time it takes X to roll to L ....... . Time it takes X to fall to M.
12. Loss of potential energy of X in Loss of potential energy of
falling to G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . Y in falling to K.
143

Behavior. The student must recall the general principles of supply


and demand and determine their use in each situation to determine
the effect of the situation. Solution only is requested. (Type 3)

Situation. Fictional situations which exemplify the points involved.


(T e A)

x-, Original Demand Curve y- Original


\
Supply Curve
Price ' ' \ I

'\
\ '' \ I
I

\
\
'' /
/

'' ' '' /


''
''

--
--- -- --- Quantity

17. In the diagram above the unbroken lines represent the original
supply and demand condition for each of the products listed below.
For each product a change of conditions is specified which may cause
a shift in either or both of the original curves, such that the new point
of intersection is at A, B, C, D, or E. (B and D represent shifts in
demand or supply, but not both, while A, C, and E represent a shift in
both supply and demand, )

After the answer sheet number which precedes each product, blacken
the lettered space which designates the point of intersection of the
curves which apply to the new conditions. Assume that there are no
other changes in supply or demand than those specified. Assume also
that there are no restrictions which interfere with the existence of a
free market.
Product New Conditions
1. Automobiles ...... New union agreements have practically eliminated
.labor grievances. Those who most urgently
wanted new cars have been supp.lied.
2. Butter ........... During the winter months production is lowest.
Taxes on oleomargarine have been e.liminated.
3. Shoes . . . . . . . . . . . . Stockmen are holding back beef cattle from the
market in anticipation of higher prices.
4. Oysters .......... The Chesapeake Bay oysters are found tobe suc-
cumbing to sicknesses induced by increasing
pollution of the bay.
4. 00 - ANALYSIS

At a somewhat more advanced level than the skills of


comprehension and application are those involved in analy-
sis. In comprehension the emphasis is on the grasp of the
meaning and intent of the material. In application it is on
remembering and bringing to bear upon given material the
appropriate generalizations or principles. Analysis empha-
sizes the breakdown of the material into its constituent parts
and detection of the relationships of the parts and of the way
they are organized. lt may also be directed at the tcchniqucs
and devices used to convey the meaning or to establish the
conclusion of a communication.

Although analysis may be conducted merely as an exer-


cise in detecting the organization and structure of a commu-
nication and may therefore become its own end, it is prob-
ably more defensible educationally to consider analysis as an
aid to fuller comprehension or as a prelude to an evaluation
of the material.

Skill in analysis may be found as an objective of any field


of study. lt is frequent.ly expressed as one of their impor-
tant objectives by teachers of science, social studies, phi-
.losophy, and the arts. They wish, for example, to deve.lop
in students the ability to distinguish fact from hypothesis in
a communication, to identify conclusions and supporting
statements, to distinguish relevant from extraneous mate-
rial, to note how one idea relates to another, to see what un-
stated assumptions are involved in what is said, to distin-
guish dominant from subordinate ideas or themes in poetry
or music, to find evidence of the author's techniques and
purposes, etc., etc.

No entirely clear lines can be drawn between analysis and


comprehension at one end or between analysis and evaluation
at the other. Comprehension deals with the content of mate-
rial, analysis with both content and form. One may speak of
"analyzing" the meaning of a communication, but this usually
refers to a more complex level of ability than "understand-
ing" or "comprehending" the meaning -- and that is the inten-
tion in the use of "analysis" here. lt is true also that ana.ly-
sis shades into evaluation, especially when we think of "crit-
ical ana.lysis. " As one analyzes the relationships of e.lements

144
145
of an argument, he may be judging how well the argument
hangs together. In analyzing the form of a communication,
or the techniques used, one may express opinions about how
well the communication serves its purpose.

And yet the type of ability we call analysis may be ab-


stracted, and usefully. One who comprehends the meaning
of a communication may not be able to analyze it at all ef-
fectively, and one who is skillful in the analysis of material
may evaluate it badly. In the selection of the illustrative ed-
ucationa.l obJectives and test ilems which follow, an attempt
has been made to use materials clearly above the level of
comprehension and below that of evaluation.

Analysis, as an objective, may be divided into three


types or levels. At one level the student is expected to
break down the material into its constituent parts, to identi-
fy or classify the elements of the communication. At a sec-
ond level he is required to make explicit the relationships
among the elements, to determine their connections and in-
teractions. A third level involves recognition of the organi-
zational principles, the arrangement and structure, which
hold together the communication as a whole.

4. 10 - Analysis of Elements

A communication may be conceived of as composed of a


large number of elements. Some of these elements are ex-
plicitly stated or contained in the communication and can be
recognized and classified relatively easily. Thus, the read-
er of a communication should have little difficulty in recog-
nizing the hypotheses which are being investigated since they
are likely to be so identified by the writer. He may also be
able to recognize the conclusions the writer is drawing be-
cause these are also likely to be stated explicitly by the
writer.

However, there are many other elements in a communi-


cation which are not so clearly labelled or identified by the
writer. Many of these elements may be of paramount impor-
tance in determining the nature of the communication, and
until the reader can detect them he may have difficulty in
fully comprehending or evaluating the communication. Thus
there are unstated assumptions being made by the writer
146

which can only be inferred from an analysis of a series of


statements within the document. lt is also of value to the
reader if he can detect the nature and function of particular
statements in the communication. Some are staj;ements of
fact, some are statements of value, while othe1s may be
sta:tements of intent. Many other types of statements may
be included and it is left to the reader to determine the na -
ture of each.

4.10 - Analysis of Elements--Illustrative Educational


Objectives

The ability to recognize unstated assumptions.

Skill in distinguishing facts from hypotheses.

The ability to distinguish factual from normative state-


ments.

Skill in identifying motives andin discriminating between


mechanisms of behavior with reference to individuals and
groups.

Ability to distinguish a conclusion from statements which


support it.

4. 20 - Analysis of Relationships

Having identified the different elements within a commu -


nication, the reader still has the task of determining some
of the major relationships among the elements as well as
the relationships among the various parts of the communica-
tion. At the most obvious level he may need to determine
the relationship of the hypotheses to the evidence, and in
turn the re lationship between the conclusions and the hypothe -
ses as weil as evidence. Analysis would also include the re-
lationships among the different kinds of evidence presented.

At a möre difficult level is likely to be the analysis of a


communication into the parts which are essential to or which
form the main thesis as contrasted with those parts or ele-
ments which may help to expand, develop, or support this
thesis. Much of analysis of relationships may deal with the
consistency of part to part, or element to element; or the
147

relevance of elements or parts to the central idea or thesis


in the communication.

4. 20 - Analysis of Relationships--Illustrative Educational


Objectives

Skill in comprehending the interre.lationships among the


ideas in a passage.

Ability to recognize what particulars are relevant to the


validation of a judgment.

Ability to recognize which facts or assumptions are es-


sential to a main thesis or to the argUJp.ent in support of
that thesis.

Ability to check the consistency of hypotheses with given


information and assumptions.

Ability to distinguish cause-and-effect relationships from


other sequential relationships.

Ability to analyze the relations of statements in an argu-


ment, to distinguish relevant from irrelevant statements,

Ability to detect logical fallacies in arguments.

Ability to recognize the causal relations and the impor-


tant and unimportant details in an historical account.

4. 30 - Analysis of Organizational Principles

At an even more complex and difficult level is likely to


be the task of analyzing the structure and organization of a
communication. Rarely will the producer of a communica-
tion explicitly point out the organizational principles he has
used and quite frequent.ly he may not be aware of the princi-
ples he has utilized. Thus, his purpose, point of view, atti-
tude, or general conception of a field may be discerned in
the writing and the reader may be unable to fully comprehend
or evaluate the communication until he has determined them.
148

Similarly, the producer of a communication selects some


form, pattern, or structure and organizes his arguments,
evidence, or other elements around these. The analysis of
these underlying organizational qualities should help in the
comprehension as well as evaluation of the entire communi-
cation. Frequent.ly it is impossible to make an evaluation
until this has been done.

4. 30 - Analysis of Organizational Principles--lllustrative


Educational Objectives

Ability to analyze, in a particu.lar work of art, the rela-


tion of materials and means of production to the "ele-
ments" and to the organization.

The ability to recognize form and pattern in literary or


artistic works as a means of understanding their mean-
ing.

The ability to infer the author's purpose, point of view,


or traits of thought and feeling as exhibited in his work.

Ability to infer an author's concept of science, philosophy,


history, or of his art as exemplified in his practice.

Ability to see the techniques used in persuasive materi-


als, such as advertising, propaganda, etc.

Ability to recognize the point of view or bias of a writer


in an historical account.
149
Testing for Analysis, and illustrative test items

In testing the ability to analyze, the student may be


asked questions about some material with which he is pre -
sumed tobe familiar, or the material for analysis may be
presented to him in the test situation. His ability to ana-
lyze material is usually tested more dependably in the latter
case, for then one can be more confident that his answers
are not affected by lack of familiarity with the material or
inability to remernber it adequately. While it is true that
knowledge is used, and is often required, in making an ade-
quate analysis of any communication, there are few occa-
sions when one must analyze material without having that
material before him. lf the material to be analyzed is new
to the student, and appropriate questions are used, it is
likely to be a genuine test of his analytical abilities, for he
has no opportunity to use analytical comments which he sim-
ply recalls from previous discussions of the material.

The material given for analysis in a test may be a liter-


ary passage, a description of a scientific experiment or a
social situation, a set of data, an argument, a picture, a
musical selection, etc., etc. Or the student may be placed
in an actual situation, such as a laboratory in which he ana-
lyzes the reactions of materials, or a classroom in which he
must analyze the interactions of members of the group, or--
as is well known in military training and testing--a field sit-
uation in which he must identify and relate a variety of fac-
tors.

The student may show his ability by making a series of


free or guided responses, or by selecting the best answers
to objective questions. An advantage of the latter method
is that items can be structured so that the answers inc.lude
common errors which students are likely to make.

The errors in analysis may be grouped as follows:

A. Crude errors

Misjudging the nature of elemmts of the communi-


cation or the relationships between elements. Con-
fusing basic and subordinate elements.
150
Inability to identify forms and patterns. Failure
to see the bearing of elements upon the intent of
the communication as a whole.

B. Incomplete analysis

The student may be essentially "on the right track,"


but he misses some of the elements, relationships,
or principles which he ought to see.

C. Over-analysis

Some students go too far in their effort to analyze


a communication, breaking it up into more minute
elements than is appropriate for the given material,
and thereby often missing the more important rela-
tionships.

D. Other limited errors

Test items may be so structured that several an-


swers are partly right but one represents a more
adequate analysis than the others. Here the dis-
tinction is not between right and wrang, or between
ability and inability, but is made in terms of the
quality of analysis.
151
4. 00 - ANALYSIS -- ILLUSTRATIVE TEST IT EMS

4.10 - Analysis of Elements

In ltems 1 - 9 each item requires students to


identify an element of a communication. No. 8
asks for an "important" unstated assumption,
which would seem to involve analysis of rela-
tionships; actually, however, all except one
of the answers presented in the item are eith-
er stated or not assumed, so that the student
has only to identify the one answer which rep-
resents an unstated assumption.

1. Galileo investigated the problem of the acceleration of fall-


ing bodies by rolling balls down very smooth planes in-
clined at increasing angles, since he had no means of de-
termining very short intervals of time. From the data
obtained he extrapolated for the case of free fall. Which
of the following is an assumption implicit in the extrapo-
lation?

1. That air resistance is negligible in free fall.


2. That objects fall with constant acceleration.
3. That the acceleration observed with the inclined plane
is the same as that involved in free fall.
4. That the planes are frictionless.
5. That a vertical plane and one which is nearly so have
nearly the same effect on the ball.

2. A and B were arguing about the desirability of adopting a na-


tionwide system of compu.lsory health insurance in the
United States. B sai<,; that, while he had no fundamental ob-
jection to health insurance, he felt strongly that people
should not be compelled to participate in it. "Naw, .laak
here," he said, "Da the peaple want health insurance ar
dan't they? I dan't think they da, but in either case, cam-
pulsory insurance is bad. If the people really want health
insurance, there is na need for compu.lsion. lf they don't
want it, it is impossible to farce them to participate. And
so the answer is clear. "

Which of the following statements most nearly expresses the


logical canclusian of B's argument?

1. Health insurance is bad.


2. Compulsory health insurance is bad.
3. Compulsion is impossible.
4. Compulsion is unnecessary.
5. Compulsion is either unnecessary or impossible.
152
(Item 3 accompanies a reading passage in the test booklet.)

3. Which of the following is an assumption,specific to this experi-


ment, that was made in the determination of the charge?

1. The force of gravity is the same whether the drops are


charged or not.
2. Opposite charges attract each other.
3. Only a single charge is present on a drop.
4. The mass of a drop is equal to lts density times its volume.
5. None of these.

Items 4 and 5 refer to the following paragraph:

11 For what men say is that, if I am really just and am not


2 also thought just, profit there is none, but the pain and loss
on the other hand is unmistakable. But if, though unjust, I
4 acquire the reputation of justice, a heavenly life is promised
to me. Since then appearance tyrannizes over truth and is lord
6 of happiness, to appearance I must devote myself. I will de-
scribe around me a picture and shadow of virtue to be the
8 vestibule and exterior of my house; behind I will trail the
subtle and crafty fox. 11

4. Which one of the following best states the major premise of the
argument? ·

1. "For what men say is" (line 1).


2. 11 if I am really just" (line 1).
3. 11 profit there is none" (line 2).
4. 11 appearance tyrannizes over truth and is lord of happiness 11
(line 5).
5. 11 to appearance I must devote myself 11 (line 6).

5. Which one of the following best states the conclusion of the argu-
ment?

1. "For what men say is 11 (line 1).


2. "if I am really just" (line 1)
3. 11 profit there is none 11 (line 2).
4. "appearance tyrannizes over truth and is lord of happiness"
(line 5).
5. 11 to appearance I must devote myself 11 (line 6).

(Other items, involving analysis of relationships, can be


based on this same paragraph. See Item 17, below.)
153
Item 6 refers to the following situation:

The college committee in charge of social regulations was hold-


ing an open hearing on a proposal that the rule on chaperoning
coeducational outings (wiener roasts, overnight hikes, campfires,
etc.) should be more strictly applied. A student in the audience
got the floor and made this speech:

(A) This whole discussion is ridiculous,


(B) for we shouldn't have chaperones at all!
(C) You see, any chaperone you get will either arrange not to
see what h;lppens or he will be so badly outnumbered he
can't keep track of what is going on.
(D) But chaperones are supposed to guarantee that what goes
on is respectable.
(E) So the chaperonage system is utterly ineffective and full
of hypocrisy.
(F) Besides, collegians will never develop maturity unless
they are given responsibilities to exercise and are really
trusted wfth these responsibilities.

6. There is one statement in the student 's argument for which reasons
are offered, but which he does not offer as a reason for any other
statement. That statement, his main conclusion, is

1. A. 4. E.
2. B. 5. F.
3. C.

(The following question is based on an excerpt from Lindsay,


The Modern Democratic State, which was distributed prior
tothe examination and students were permitted to refer to
the book and to any notes during the examination.)

7. The main question that Lindsay attempts to answer in Chapter I


is:

1. What is the sovereign authority in the state?


2. What is the relation of law to sovereignty?
3. What is the relation of authority and consent to sovereignty?
4. Is sovereignty advisable?

Items 8 and 9 refer to the following situation:

A group of college students were discussing the relative merits


of two grading systems. lt had been suggested that only two
grades be used: S (satisfactory) and U (unsatisfactory), instead
of the A-B-C-D-F system then in use at the college. One student
made the following statement:
154
"People go to college to learn, not just to get grades. Grades
are no indication of absolute degree of learning, they are
purely relative and then mostly determined by chance or
probability (guessing, multiple-choice tests, etc.). The stu-
dent is a better judge of how he is doing than the professor.
Therefore, an S-U system would be better since it would cut
down the amount of differentiation between grades and give a
better picture of how the student is doing. 11

8. An important unstated assumption involved in this argument is


that

1. the accuracy of the A-B-C-D-F system cannot or will not


be significantly improved.
2. people go to college to learn.
3. the student is a better judge of how he is doing than the
professor.
4. an S-U system would be better.
5. grades have no importance.

9. The conclusion of this student's argument is that

1. grades should be abolished.


2. students do not care about their grades.
3. students should grade themselves.
4. a new grading system should be substituted for the present
one,
5. the present grading system is better than the proposed
substitute.

(Other items, involving analysis of relationships, can


be based on this same situation. See Items 18 and 19,
below.)
155
4. 20 - Analysis of Relationships

Items 10 and 11 call for analysis of the relation-


ships of statements in an argument. They accom-
pany Item 6 in a test.

Items 10 and 11 refer to the following situation:

The college committee in charge of social regulations was holding


an open meeting on a proposal that the rule on chaperoning coedu-
cational outings (wiener roasts, overnight hikes, campfires, etc.)
should be more strictly applied. A student in the audience got the
floor and made this speech:

(A) This whole discussion is ridiculous,


(B) for we shou.ldn't have chaperones at all!
(C) You see, any chaperone you get will either arrange not to
see what happens or he will be so badly outnumbered he
can't keep track of what is going on.
(D) But chaperones are supposed to guarantee that what goes
on is respectable.
(E) So the chaperonage system is utterly ineffective and full
of hypocrisy.
(F) Besides, collegians will never develop maturity unless
they are given responsibilities to exercise and are really
trusted with these responsibilities.

10. The student offered A as a reason for

l. B.
2. C.
3. D.
4. E.
5. None of these.

11. The student offered B as a reason for

1. A.
2. C.
3. D.
4. E.
5. None of these.

(Similar items refer to statements C, D, E, and F.)


156
Items 12 - 14 require students to interpret the quoted
statement and to analyze the relations of elements of
the statement and of the play to the general import of
the statement. Items 12 and 13 involve analysis in
terms of relevance; Item 14 involves analysis in terms
of consistency.

Items 12 to 14 are based on the following paragraph:

"(l) Hamlet is given a command by the ghost of his murdered father


to take vengeance upon the murderer, Claudius. (2) He is not able
to da so immediately because he does not have sufficient proof that
Claudius has murdered his father. (3) In the process of finding this
proof, Hamlet unwittingly allows the king to discover his suspicions.
(4) As the action proceeds, Hamlet cannot take vengeance because he
never has a real opportunity to da so. (5) As the action ends, Ham-
let becomes involved in a duel arranged by Claudius which has as its
consequence the death of the hero and his adversary as well as the
more importa:nt of the subordinate characters."

12. A discussion and evaluation of the statement given above would


revolve most around the points made in
1. sentence 1.
2. sentences 2 and 3.
3. sentences 2 and 4.
4. sentence 5.

13. Assume, temporarily, complete agreement with the statement.


In discussing various parts of the play, which among the follow-
ing would you tend to minimize?

l. Hamlet's interview with the ghost in Act I.


2. The lapse of time between Acts I and II.
3. The play within the play.
4. Hamlet's departure for England.
5. The short lapse of time between the play within the play
and Hamlet's departure for England.

14. Which of the following statements about Hamlet is least incon-


sistent with the general position taken in the statement?

1. Hamlet is a man of action.


2. Hamlet is by nature a meditative person, not accustonted
to meet problems by direct action.
3. Hamlet is an intellectual, over whom someone more shrewd
even if less learned has the advantage in the world of prac-
tical affairs.
4. Hamlet is normally a sensitive, good-natured person, who,
however, during the period covered by the first four acts
of the play, is in a state of melancholy -- a condition in-
duced by his father's death and accompanied by a great
lethargy.
157

Items 15 and 16 are designed to test such an objec-


tive as "ability to recognize which facts or assump-
tions are essential to a main thesis or to the argu-
ment in support of that thesis." Item 16 accompa-
nies Item 3 in a test.

15. Statement of facts: The following table represents the relation-


ship between the yearly income of certain families and the med-
ical attention they receive.
Per Cent of Family Members
Who Received No Medical
Family lncome Attention During_the Year

Under $1,200 . 47
$1,200 to $3,000 40
$3,000 to $5,000 33
$5,000 to $10,000 24
Over $10,000 . . 14

Conclusion: Members of families with small incomes are health-


ier than members of families with large in:comes.

Which one of the following assumptions would be necessary to


justify the conclusion?

1. Wealthy families had more money to spend for medical care.


2. All members of families who needed medical attention re-
ceived it.
3. Many members of families with low incomes were not able
to pay their doctor bills.
4. Members of families with low incomes often did not receive
medical attention.

(Item 16 accompanies a reading passage in the test booklet.)

16. Which of the following assumptions is necessary in order to de-


termine the mass of a drop by the method described?

1. The drop falls with unüorm acceleration.


2. All the drops sprayed into the chamber are of the same
size.
3. The drop is charged.
4. The drop is nearly spherical.
5. The electrical force is equal to the gravitational force.
158

Item 17, calling for analysis of the way one element


functions in relation to others, accompanies Items 4
and 5 in a test.

Item 17 refers to the following paragraph:

"For what men say is that, if I am really just and am not also
2 thought just, profit there is none, but the pain and loss on the
other hand is unmistakable. But if, though unjust, I acquire
4 the reputation of justice, a heavenly life is promised to me.
Since then appearance tyrannizes over truth and is lord of hap-
6 piness, to appearance I must devote myself. I will describe
around me a picture and shadow of virtue to be the vestibule
8 and exterior of my house; behind I will trail the subtle and
crafty fox."

17. What is the function of the last sentence (lines 6-9)? Thesen-
tence

1. restates the central thesis in figurative language.


2. advances the premise of the argument.
3. presents factual data to Support the central thesis.
4. contradicts the central thesis.
5. introduces a new concept.

Items 18 and 19 require analysis of the relevance and


importance of elemmts in an argument. They accom-
pany Items 8 and 9 in a test.

Items 18 and 19 refer to the following situation:

A group of college students were discussing the relative merits of


two grading systems. lt had been suggested that only two grades be
used: S (satisfactory) and U (unsatisfactory), instead of the A-B-C-
D-F system then in use at the college. One student made the follow-
ing statement:

"People go to college to learn, not just to get grades. Grades are


no indication of absolute degree of learning, they are purely rela-
tive and then mostly determined by chance or probabi.lity (guessing,
multiple-<)hoice tests, etc.). The student is a better judge of how
he is doing than the professor. Therefore, an S-U system would
be better since it would cut down the amount of differentiation be-
tween grades and give a better picture of how the student is doing."

18. The conc.lusion depends fundamentally on the proposition that

1. people do not go to college just to get grades.


2. the student is the best judge of how he is doing.
3. grades are very inaccurate indications of what students
have learned.
4. one grading system is better than the other.
5. multiple-choice tests are used in determining grades.
159
19. Which of the following statements is least essential as apart
of the argument?

1. Grades are no indication of absolute degree of learning.


2. An S-U system would cut down the amount of differentia-
tion between grades.
3. An S-U system would give a better picture of how the stu-
dent is doing.
4. Grades are determined by chance or probability.
5. The student is a better judge of how he is doing than the
professor ..

Items 20 and 21 are based on an excerpt from


Lindsay's The Modern Democratic State and accom-
pany Item 7 in a test. These two items call for analy-
sis of relationships between elements of a communi-
cation. Note that No. 20 requires, not merely the
identification of an element (assumption), but a judg-
ment concerning what assumption is essential in re -
lation to other elements.

20. An assumption basic to Lindsay's prefe~nce for voluntary


associations rather than government orders (Paragraph 73)
is a belief

1. that government is not organized to make the best use


of experts.
2. that freedom of speech, freedom of meeting, freedom of
association, are possible only under a system of volun-
tary associations.
3. in the value of experiment and initiative as a means of
attaining an ever-improving society.
4. in the benefits of competition.

21. The relation between the definition of sovereignty given in


Paragraph 2 and that given in Paragraph 9 is best expressed
as follows:

1. There is no fundamental difference between them, only a


difference in formulation.
2. The definition given in Paragraph 2 includes that given in
Paragraph 9, but in addition includes Situations which are
excluded by that given in Paragraph 9.
3. The definition given in Paragraph 9 includes that given in
Paragraph 2, but in addition includes situations which are
excluded by that given in Paragraph 2.
4. The two definitions are incompatible with each other; the
conditions of sovereignty implied in each exclude the
other.
160

The following group of items is designed to test the


objective: "Ability to recognize what particulars
are relevant to the validation of a judgment. "

Items 22 to 26 are to be judged in relation to this resolution:

Resolved: That the term of the President of Ui.e United States


should be extended to six years.

Same statements in Items 22 to 26 Support the resolution, either di-


rectly or indirectly, some could be used in arguing against the res-
olution, and some have no bearing on the issue at all. Mark each
statement

A. if you feel that it could be used by the affirmative side in a


debate on the resolution.
N. if you fee.l that it could be used by the negative side.
X. if you feel it has no bearing on either side of the argument.

(NOTE: You are not asked to judge the truth or falsity of the
resolution or the statements.)

2 2.
,.
Efficiency increas es with experience.

23. According to the principles upon which the United States was
founded, the people should have a frequent check an the Presi-
dent.

24. The party system has many disadvantages.

25. During most of a presidential election year the economic life


of the nation is depressed by the uncertainty as to the outcome.

26. The people should have the opportunity to keep a satisfactory


President as lang as they wish.
161
4. 30 - Analysis of Organizational Principles

The following question relates to a selection given in


the test. Students cannot answer this question sim-
ply by finding a statement which is true of the article
to which the item refers. They must judge which state-
ment best expresses the purport of the artic.le as a
whole; this requires analysis of the organization and
structure of the entire communication.

27. Which one of the following is the best description of the article
as a whol.e?

1. lt presents historical evidence to prove what a govern-


ment of equal rights is like.
2. lt presents evidence that policies pursued in the past have
not been consistent with the ideal of a government of equal
rights.
3. lt presents arguments to show that certain policies pur-
sued in the past are undesirable.
4. lt is an effort to define the true functions of government.

ltems 28 and 29 are based on a composition which is


played during the test. No. 28 calls for analysis of the
systematic arrangement or structure which makes the
composition a unit. No. 29 tests such an objective as
"ability to analyze, in a particular work of art, the re-
lation of materials and means of production to the
'elements' and to the organization."

28. The general structure of the composition is

1 . theme and variatioJJS .


2. theme, developmE11t, restatement.
3. theme 1, development; theme 2, developmE11t.
4. introduction, theme, development.

29. The theme is carried essentially by

1. the strings.
2. the woodwinds.
3. the horns.
4. all in turn.
5. 00 - - SYNTHESIS

Synthesis is here defined as the putting together of ele -


ments and parts so as to form a who.le. This is a process
of working with e.lements, parts, etc., and combining them
in such a way as to constitute a pattern or structure not
clearly there before. Generally this would involve a recom-
bination of parts of previous experience with new material,
reconstructed into a new and more or less well-integrated
whole. This is the category in the cognitive domain which
most clearly provides for creative behavior on the par·t of
the learner. However, it should be emphasized that this is
not completely free creative expression since generally the
student is expected to work within the limits set by particu-
.lar problems, materials, or some theoretical and methodo-
logical framework.

Comprehension, application, and analysis also involve


the putting together of elements and the construction of
meanings, but these tend tobe more partial and less com-
plete than synthesis in the magnitude of the tas~. Also there
is less emphasis upon uniqueness and originality in these
other classes than in the one under discussion here. Perhaps
the main difference between these categories and synthesis
lies in the possibility that they involve working with a given
set of materials or elements which constitutes a whole in it-
se.lf. They involve studying a who.le in order to understand
it better. In synthesis, on the other hand, the student must
draw upon elements from many s9urces and put these to-
gether into a structure or pattern not clearly there before.
His efforts should yield a product--something that can be
observed through one or more of the senses ap.d which is
clearly more than the materials he began to work with. lt
is to be expected that a problem which is classified as a
task primarily involving synthesis will also require all of
the previous categories to some extent.

We recognize the difficulty of classifying essay questions.


The tendency is to place them in the synthesis category.
For example, if the student writes out his comprehension
or analysis of a reading selection, does such a form of
response constitute synthesis as we have defined it? lf his
essay involves analysis in terms of under.lying elements and
the like, perhaps not, since he has not come out with a pro-
duct substantially different from that which he is studying.
162
163

If we accept this point of view, then we would not regard


every act of writing as an act of synthesis. We would
assume that writing as such is primarily a skill in expres-
sion, much of which represents the remembering of ideas,
the interpretation of given materials, and the translation
of ideas into writing.

For the present, it seems best to distinguish between


different kinds of synthesis primarily on the basis of the
p.roduct. Such an approach does permit classification into
three relatively distinct divisions which have some practical
significance. Classification on the basis of product is not
inconsistent with the taxonomy, since the construction of
different products may well require somewhat different pro-
cesses. A similar assumption is made in the Knowledge
and Analysis categories of this Handbook.

In the first sub-category, one may view the product or


performance as essentially ~ unique communication. Usu-
ally the author is trying to communicate certain ideas and
experiences to others, but in some instances he may be
interested in expression for its own sake. Usually too he
tries to communicate for one or more of the following pur-
poses--to inform, to describe, to persuade, to impress, or
to entertain. Ultimately, he wishes to achieve a given ef-
fect (response) in some audience. Consequently, he uses
a particular medium of expression, together with its forms
and conventions, to organize certain ideas and experiences.
The product, or outcome of the synthesis, can be considered
"unique" in at least two respects. First, it does not
represent a proposed set of operations or specifications to
be carried out, except perhaps in the narrow sense of fur-
nishing an expressive design which may be interpreted and
performed by an individual or group, as in the reading
aloud of poetry, the presentation of a play, or the perform-
ance of a musical composition. Secondly, it does not ordi-
narily represent a contribution to our fund of tested knowl-
edge; in fact, its relation to an external theoretical struc-
ture is not at issue.

In the second sub-category, one may view the product as


~plan or proposed set of operations to be carried out. This
may be illustrated as follows:
164
Proposed set Process-i.e., carrying Expected
of operations out the set of operations outcome

Plan for an Carrying out the Experimental


experiment exper:inlent findings; proba-
bility statement

A teaching unit Teaching Changes in be -


havior

Specificalions Buüding lhe lwuse The house


for a new house

The products of synthesis classified here thus fall in the


first column. Clearly, each represents a kind of commu-
nication in the sense that a particular author or worker is
trying to te 11 somebody something and has recorded his
ideas (in rare instances he may carry these ideas around in
his head and we then have to infer them from his process of
carrying them out). But these efforts represent more than
communication in the sense just outlined. They represent
an attempt to propose a set of operations. In this sense,
products that fall in this group are incomplete; until they
are translated into action they represent mere ideas. Or-
dinarily, products of synthesis that fall in this second group
must meet a set of fair.ly rigorous objective criteria.

In the third sub-category, one may view the product of


synthesis as primarily a set of abstract relations. The set
of re.lations may be derived from an analysis of certain
observed phenomena, in which case they may be considered
possible relations, or hypotheses tobe tested; or they may
be derived from an ana.lysis of relations among propositions
or other symbolic representations, in which case they may
be considered necessary relations, or deductions. The
distinguishing feature of this sub-category is thus the at-
tempt to derive abstract relations from a detailed analysis.
The relations themselves are not explicit from the start;
they must be discovered or deduced.

Re lated concepts and processes. Since certain other con-


cepts and processes overlap with the synthesis category, we
will discuss them briefly. One of these is the phenomenon
of central organization in which the brain and nervous sys-
tem act as a vast organizing system. Some stimuli become
165
focal in consciousness, and are perceived as figure 11 ;
11

others remain peripheral and become part of the back-


ground; still others remain out of consciousness entirely.
In a very real way, central organization represents a syn-
thetic act. Because of its very pervasiveness, however, it
would not help us draw distinctions among different forms
of cognitive behavior. The same would be true of the pro-
cess of "integration, " the notion that every experience in-
volves a combination of parts of previous experience with
the present experience in such a way that the organism is
permanently changed, however slightly.

Often the concept of integration is discussed in terms of


"creative learning." This raises the philosophical question
of whether or not all learning is "creative. 11 In one sense,
all learning is creative; the individual has acquired an un-
derstanding or some other reorganization of experience
which is novel for him. The novelty for him is what makes
the experience "creative." Many psychologists and educa-
tors would argue similarly, and certainly this view would
be consistent with the theoretical framework of this taxon-
omy. Other writers, particularly sociologists and anthro-
pologists, would prefer restricting the meaning of "creativ-
ity" to the production of something new, unique, and origin-
al in man's culture--the traditional meaning.

A concept related to "creative learning" is that of "crea-


tive expression. 11 The latter concept usually refers to a
type of education which encourages self-expression on the
part of the learner. Rich sensory experience and freedom
to express one's whole personality are considered basic
conditions. Although literature, fine arts, music, and drama
seem to be the most popular media, creative expression
need not be limited to these. Such activities represent
synthetic processes to the extent that they require the indi-
vidual to organize ideas into new patterns, and probably
many of them do. However, many do not qualify because
they emphasize expression of emotional impulses and phy-
sical movements, rather than organization of ideas. Prob-
ably the main difference between "synthesis 11 and "creative
expression" lies in the greater inclusiveness of the latter
term. Whether all efforts at synthesis shall be considered
"creative expression," however, would not seem immediately
evident. Much would depend on the nature of the individu-
al's motivation and how freely he gave himself to the task.
166
Educational significance of synthesis objectives. Philo-
sophical arguments for the cultivation of synthesis objec-
tives are numerous and need not be documented here.
Typically, they emphasize personal expression as against
passive participation, and independence of thought and action
as against dependence. Personal expression is viewed as
an end in itself; it is living at its bestand fu.llest. Independ-
ence of thought and action are defended largely on social
grounds: a democratic society thrives best when its citizens
are able to arrive at their own decisions rather than when
someone in authority does the thinking for them.

Arguments in terms of the needs and demands of society


do not stop at the level of philosophical discussion. They
emphasize real problems that face democratic countries
here and now, and point out that we cannot expect to pro-
gress nor even to survive unless we develop and draw upon
the creative potentialities of the entire popu.lation. This is
partly a problem of identifying creative talent, but it also
is one of exploring the nature of productive thinking and of
finding better ways of cultivating it. 1

One could cite many articles and studies which deplore


the neglect of synthesis objectives. A fairly common theme
is that current programs overemphasize activities in which
the learner functions as a consumer and critic of ideas

1 Recent writing and research on creativeness and


productive thinking (which overlap with synthetic abilities)
attest to the importance attached to these problems by many
psychologists and educators. The recent challenge by Allison
Davis and others is worth noting at this point. Allison Davis
and Robert D. Hess, "What About IQs?" Journal of the Na-
tional Education Association 38 (Nov., 1949), pp. 604-605.
Kenneth Eells and others, Intelligence and Cultural Differ-
ences, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951, xii 388.
After demonstrating that conventional intelligence tests un-
derrate the ability of children from lower socio-economic
levels, they conclude that we are depriving ourselves of un-
tapped resources of human ability and robbing such children
of their right to full development. Furthermore, because
most pupils get limited experience in genuine problem solv-
ing, these investigators believe that present programs retard
pupils of low occupational groups by two years, on the aver-
age, after they have been in school only four years I Cer-
tainly this indictment demands serious attention.
167

rather than those in which he functions as a producer. Often


criticism is directed against the over-use of objective-type
examinations on the grounds that these forms do not force
the student to produce original ideas or to organize them.
Whether or not this argument is defensible is a matter to be
decided by further study; in any case, however, lack of ap-
propriate practice must surely account for many shortcom -
ings in the development of synthesis abilities.

The psychology of learning provides anolher ilnportant


source of criteria for judging the worth of synthesis objec-
tives. Especially important are those criteria relating to
multiple outcomes and the permanence of learning. lt is
probable that tasks involving synthesis objectives provide
a wider kind of experience than those involving mainly acqui-
sition of ideas. In elementary school science, for examp.le,
pupils may work as a group defining important problems
dealing with combustion, proposing hypotheses to account
for combustion phenomena, planning simple experiments to
test these ideas, and actually carrying out the experiments
either individua.lly or in small groups. Such activities
should foster productive thinking, some independence in
approach as well as co-operativeness, knowledge of com-
bustion phenomena, knowledge of scientific method, and
perhaps most important, some skill with scientific method
as method. Over several years, experience in this form of
learning should produce profound changes in many abilities
and traits and at the same time contribute to the pupi1 1 s
growth in knowledge as such. Because such experiences
involve the relating of ideas, methods, values, etc., they
probably foster interrelation of outcomes better than expe-
riences which do not require genuine prob.lern solving. And
this in turn probably contributes to better retention and gen-
eralization, particularly of problem-solving processes, to
other situations. Evidence for multi-objective efficiency
comes from such outstanding evaluation programs as the
Wrightstone studies in New York City and the Eight-Year
Study of the Progressive Education Association. Evidence
on interrelation and permanence of learning is scanty but
in agreement with the arguments outlined here.

Especially important too are the tremendous motivational


possibilities in synthesis activities. Such tasks can become
168

highly absorbing, more so than the usual run of school as-


signments. They can offer rich personal satisfactions in
creating something that is one's own. And they can challenge
the student to do further work of a similar sort.

Synthesis objectives occur at most levels of education.


Some goals, such as "skill in writing" and "ability to formu-
late hypotheses," are as appropriate at the elementary
school level as at the Ph. D. The same may be said of the
"ability to set a poem to ~usic." Obviously, the tasks cor···
responding to these objectives will differ in their magnitude
and complexity from level to level. We would expect a pro-
gression from relatively small tasks to much larger tasks
as the student moves through the educational program. Per-
haps many synthesis objectives of the kind we have in mind
should be postponed until relatively late in a student 's edu-
cation, especially in college and post-graduate work. But
this matter is not well understood at present.

5. 10 Production of a unique communication

Under this we include those objectives in which primary


emphasis is upon communication--upon getting ideas, feel-
ings, and experiences across to others. The important con-
trolling or limiting factors in such tasks are the following:
the kinds of effects tobe achieved; the nature of the audience
in whom the effects are to be achieved; the particular medium
through which the student expresses himself; and the parti-
cular ideas and experiences that the student can draw upon
or that he wishes to communicate.

By "effects" we mean the response or change in response


desired in some audience. This would include such outcomes
as the following: the acquisition of information; the under-
standing of an idea, point of view, etc.; the acceptance of
an idea, point of view, etc.; motivation to carry out a pur-
pose that the author has in mind; change in attitude or belief;
the creation of a mood or feeling; enjoyment or emotional
satisfaction.

The nature of the audience to whom the ~tudent addresses


himself or his work is often crucial in determining what he
does. This is likely tobe the case whenever he must ex-
press himself to a specific audience, as against one that is
169
rather loosely defined or not physically assembled. In some
cases, however, it is likely that the student need not take
into account any special audience; he carries out the task
according to certain minimum standards that will be applied
by those who will evaluate his work.

Obviously, a key part in such assignments is the effec-


tiveness with which the student uses the particular medium
of expression, together with its forms and conventions, to
translate and to organize his ideas. The point is that the
particular medium also sets limits within which the student
must accomplish the purposes set by the task.

The product of synthesis is also rendered unique because


of the great latitude allowed the individual in putting his
own ideas, feelings, and experiences into it. In other
words, much of the content of the synthesis is not rigor-
ously predetermined by the requirements of the task; it
flows from the person and is used by him if he alone deems
it worthy of incorporating in his work. Of course, as we
said earlier, this is not completely free expression since
the student must still meet certain minimum requirements
such as those set by convention and by the other conditions
outlined above.

5. 10 Production of a unique communication--lllustrative


educational objectives.

Skill in writing, using an excellent organization of


ideas and statements.

Ability to write creatively a story, essay, or verse


for personal pleasure, or for the entertainment or
information of others.

Ability to teil a personal experience effectively.

Ability to make extemporaneous speeches.

Ability to write simple musical compositions, as


in setting a short poem to music.
170

5. 20 Production of a plan, or proposed set of operations

Objectives that fall in this sub-category in general aim


at the production of a plan of operations. The production of
the plan constitutes the act of synthesis. What happens
after the production of the plan is another matter; the plan
of operations might very well be carried out in parts by
several individuals.

The product, or plan of operations, must satisfy the re-


quirements of the task. Usually the requirements are laid
down in the form of specifications or data tobe taken into
account by the student. These data or specifications may
be given the student, in which case he may assume that they
are sound, or they may have to be worked out by him before
he can proceed. But in any case, the specifications do fur-
nish a rather well-defined criterion against which the stu-
dent 1s product may be evaluated. In this sense, his product
must always meet an empirical test of its soundness.

Although the student must meet such empirical require-


ments, this does not mean that there is no room for the
11 personal touch, 11 or that values have no place in his work.

Here too, as with the previous sub-category, there is con-


siderable opportunity for the student to put his own ideas
into the product, apart from any other considerations. Even
the most limiting kind of purpose, such as the testing of a
specific hypothesis, still permits the student to conceive of
a way of accomp.lishing it that is uniquely his own. In many
tasks that fall in this sub-category, values also enter the
picture. They are reflected in the specifications or other
data with which the student works, but ultimately reside
in the purposes tobe served by the outcome of the plan.

5. 20 Production of a plan, or proposed set of operations--


11.lustrative educational objectives.

Ability to propose ways of testing hypotheses.

Ability to integrate the results of an investigation


into an effective plan or solution to solve a problem.
171

Ability to plan a unit of instruction for a particular


teaching Situation.

Ability to design simple machine tools to perform


specified operations.

Ability to design a building according to given


specifications.

Ability to synthesize knowledge of che111istry,


knowledge of the unit operations, and data avail-
able in the technical literature, and apply these
to the design of chemical processes. (Chemical
engineering.)

5. 30 Derivation of a set of abstract relations

In this sub-category we include objectives that require


the student to produce, or derive, a set of abstract rela-
tions. There seem to be two somewhat different kinds of
tasks here: (1) those in which the student begins with con-
crete data or phenomena and which he must somehow either
classify or explain; (2) those in which the student begins
with some basic propositions or other symbolic representa-
tions and from which he must deduce other propositions or
relations.

The first of these types of tasks may take the form of


classifying certain phenomena. In effect, the student is to
study the phenomena, or facts based upon them, and then
come up with a logically consistent scheme for classifying
or organizing them. The scheme should adequately account
for the relations existing among the range of phenomena. At
a very high level, one can offer as examples the development
of the periodic table in chemistry in which the various chem-
ical elements have been grouped according to their funda-
mental properties, or the development of the taxonomies for
classifying plants and animals, respectively, again according
to their fundamental properties. Also at a high level--but
suitable for the graduate student in educational psychology- -
would be the derivation of a conceptua.1 scheme for categoriz-
ing teacher-pupil interaction during classroom discussions.
172

The first type of task may also take the form of explain -
ing certain observed phenomena. In this case, there is little
emphasis upon developing a classification scheme. The
problem is to formulate a hypothesis that will adequately ac-
count for a wide range of seemingly interrelated phenomena.
As with a classification scheme, the hypothesis or theory
must fit the facts and in addition be internally consistent--
i. e., free from logical contradictions.

The second broad type of task clearly begins with abstract


symbols, propositions, and the like, rather than with con-
crete data. The problem is to move from these symbolic
representations to deductions that can reasonably be made.
In other words, the student operates within some theoretical
framework, and he must reason in terms of it. He is thus
quite circumscribed in what he does, although the task can
permit him to carry his thinking quite far. But always in
the background are rigorous objective criteria which his
product of synthesis must meet; subjective standards, of the
sort that predominate in the first and second sub-categories,
all but vanish here.

5. 30 Derivation of a set of abstract relations--Illustrative


educational objectives.

Ability to formulate appropriate hypotheses based


upon an analysis of factors involved, and to modify
such hypotheses in the light of new factors and
considerations.

Ability to formulate a theory of learning applicable


to classroom teaching.

Ability to perceive various possible ways in which


experience may be organized to form a conceptual
structure.

Ability to make mathematical discoveries and


generalizations.
173
Testing for Synthesis, and illustrative test items

Special Problems

A major problem in testing for synthesis objectives is


that of providing conditions favorable to creative work. This
problem is not peculiar to synthesis objectives, but it does
seem tobe more crucial than with some of the other objec-
tives. Perhaps the most important condition is that of free-
dom. This should include freedom from excessive tension
and from pressures to adopt a particular viewpoint. The
student should be made to feel that the product of his efforts
need not conform to the views of the instructor, or the com-
munity, or some other authority, if such freedom is other-
wise consistent with the nature of the task. If the effort is
tobe rather creative, the student should also have consider-
able freedom of activity--freedom to determine his own pur-
poses, freedom to determine the materials or other elements
that go into the final product, and freedom to determine the
specifications which the synthesis should meet. Creativity
seems to be fostered by such conditions. Too much control
and too detailed instructions, on the other hand, seem to
stifle productivity. Time is another important condition.
Many synthesis tasks require far more time than an hour or
two; the product is likely to emerge only after the student
spends considerable time familiarizing himself with the task,
exploring different approaches, interpreting and analyzing
relevant materials, and trying out various schemes of organ-
ization. In some situations, the examiner can shorten this
period of preparation by permitting the student to do many of
the preliminary tasks before the time of the examination, if
such an arrangement does not otherwise interfere with the
validity of the examination. A good example is the essay
exercise outlined on pages 177 and 178. In that case, the ex-
aminer may distribute the special reading materials well in
advance of the examination so that students will have had
sufficient time to analyze them and become familiar with the
important ideas.

A second major problem is that of sampling. Again this


problem seems to be especially crucial in the testing of syn-
thesis objectives. For one thing, many synthesis tasks take
time--days and weeks instead of hours--so that a single prod-
uct usually may have to represent the student's ability. Under
174

such conditions, of course, the examiner must consider


whether or not that sample is sufficiently reliable tobe ac-
cepted as truly representative of the student 's ability. Ob-
taining a second sample, however, in itself poses many
practical problems which the examiner may not be able to
surmount. lt is probable too that some synthesis tasks in-
volving a high degree of creativeness require special condi-
tions of stimulation, mood, fluency, and the like, and that
such conditions tend to make performance rather variable
if not downright unstable. Synthctic skills and abilities may
thus be rather unstable and unpredictable.

A third major problem is that of evaluation. Exercises


involving synthesis often yield rather complex products for
which objective criteria of evaluation are lacking. A new
poem, a new musical piece, or a new design may defy evalu-
ation. Who is to pass judgment on the quality of the product
and by what standards? In the absence of an objective stand-
ard such as an external framework, theory, or the like, the
examiner may have to rely h.eavily upon the opinions of com-
petent judges. Checklists and rating scales should be es-
pecially useful here, but the examiner ought to insure that
they do not emphasize elements of the product to the neglect
of global qualities which, after all, may be more fundamen-
tal in any synthesis.

At this point we might note the projective character of


many products of synthesis. While it is true that most
behavior is projective in the sense that the individual un-
consciously or otherwise reveals idiosyncrasies, situations
undoubtedly vary greatly in the extent to which they evoke
such traits. Tasks calling for synthesis of materials, ideas,
and the like would seem to provide an excellent means of
encouraging projection. The writing of an essay, for ex-
ample, is more than an expression of skill in writing; it is
an expression of the writer's personality. Thus it may re-
veal not only peculiarities of language usage, but also atti-
tudes toward various issues, feelirigs about the self, and
175

so on. The product bears the stamp of the person. 2


Clinical psychologists have long been interested in such
personal products as a means of studying personality, but
instructors make comparatively little systematic use of
them for that purpose. lt is probable that educational re -
search will make increasing use of personal products as a
method of studying personality development and various
subt.le changes that take place during the course of learning.
Such efforts will call for refinements in our methods of
appraisal.

A fourth major problem worth noting is the practical


problem of administration. Special materials and equip-
ment are often necessary, even when the examination is
administered to a group. A synthesis task in architectural
design or musical composiqon would require individual
equipment to a greater extent than would be needed for tasks
involving analysis. Materials tobe used for analysis by a
class can often be printed, recorded, or otherwise repro-
duced so that the entire group may work with a single speci-
men or copy. In many cases, too, exercises calling for
synthesis can only be properly administered on an individual
basis, and this practice is quite cost.ly.

Occasionally examiners have resorted to indirect methods


of testing synthesis objectives. For example, some publish-
ed tests attempt to measure effectiveness of expression,
particularly ability to organize ideas, through multiple-
choice items. Thus the test may ask the student to rearrange
a group of sentences to form a coherent paragraph, or a
group of paragraphs to form a coherent essay. If such in-
direct methods can be shown to yield valid indexes of the
behaviors in question, then some of the practical problems
of administration can be overcome and economies can be
realized.

2 Studies by Allport and others have shown that style of


writing is rather consistent and can be identified with con-
siderable accuracy. Cf. F. H. Allport, L, Walker, and E.
Lathers, "Written Compositions and Characteristics of Per-
sonality," Archives of Psychology, 26, (1934), No.173, p. 82.
176
Thus we recognize that short-answer questions may not
be testing synthesis directly, even though they are intended
to evoke the sorts of operations we would regard as acts of
synthesis. lt is quite possible that short-answer questions
may indirectly appraise such abilities. Whether or not they
can is, of course, an empirical matter. At the present
time, we cannot give a generalization on this point. Only
further research can do that.

Types of Errors

In general, a synthesis is faulty to the extent that it lacks


"goodness of fit" to the requirements of the problem. Faulty
synthesis may be due to one or more of the following factors,
many of which seem to reflect faulty comprehension and
analysis:

Misinterpreting the purpose or nature of the problem.

Misinterpreting the nature of important elements and


their interrelations. Confusing basic and subordinate
elements.

Omitting important elements.

Applying irrelevant or inaccurate elements.

Over-organizing the synthesis, so that the result is too


artificial or inflexible to satisfy varying requirements,
as with a plan of investigation or an architectural design.

Otherwise failing to satisfy the requirements of an ex-


ternal theory, framework, or of some other standard.
177
5.00 - SYNTHESIS -- ILLUSTRATIVE TEST ITEMS
5, 10 Production of a unique communication
Directions for the Essay
(Time: 3 hours)
1. (Note: Students were given a number of short passages dealing with
the problem. )

DIRECTIONS: Write a unified paper on some restricted aspects of the


question of the future of private property in America. The paper may
be either an argument in support of some form of ownership which you
favor, or an attack upon some form which you oppose, or both. lt must,
however, observe the following stipulations:

lt must include a discussion of the moral bases and social effects


of the kind of ownership which you favor or wish to attack. For example,
what ultimate right has anyone to claim anything as his own? What
should he be allowed to da with what he owns? How should such rights
be achieved, or protected, or limited? What will be the effects on so-
ciety of the policies which you discuss?

lt must relate your thesis to the arguments pro and con of the
passages distributed before the examination which are relevant to your
position. lt must not merely report what these passages said in the
order in which they were printed. In the course of developing your own
position you must make use of the arguments which support it and refute
the arguments which oppose it.

lt must show some application of your theoretica.l position to one


or more examples of property rights drawn from your own experience,
observation, or reading. The following examples may suggest possi-
bilities: private property in the family, or in the dormitory; rented,
owned, and cooperative housing; public and private schools; independent,
chain, and cooperative stores; making the University Bookstore a co-
operative; municipal ownership of utilities and transportation; nationali-
zation of banks, coal mines, railroads, and communications; national
developments such as TVA; the rights of capital, management, labor,
and consumers in the control of large corporations, etc.

In form, the paper must be an argument. lt must not be a mere


assertion of your opinions supported by a description of the practices
which you favor. lt must give reasons for the position which you favor
and against the positions which you oppose. The reasoning must be
logical, but it need not make exp.licit reference to logical forms.

The argument should be clear, interesting, and acceptable to the


audience to which it is addressed. In a preliminary paragraph, separate
from the rest of the paper, describe briefly the traits of your audience
which you intend to keep in mind while writing your paper.

The paper must be effectively organized and well written. lt must


not follow the points given above as a writing outline. lt must not ignore
them, however. Students are expected to deal with the assignment.
178
The nature of the opinions expressed in this paper will have no
effect on grades, and will never be revealed. Papers will be read only
by members of the English 3 staff, and only after the names of the
writers have been removed.

lt will be wise to spend about half an hour thinking about the as -


signment and planning the paper, and to reserve half an hour at the end
to read over and revise what you have written. Do not attempt more
than you can treat adequately in two hours of writing. A careful limita-
tion of the scope of the paper is one mark of a good essay. The exami-
nation booklet has been enlarged; if possible, confine your essay to one
booklet. The first pages may be used for notes, an outline, or a rough
draft; but draw lines through this material to indicate that it is not part
of the finished essay. Please write in ink, and as legib.ly as you can.
Since there will not be time to make a fair copy of the essay in its final
form, portions may be crossed out and corrections inserted between the
lines and in the margins, but please make the corrections as clearly
and neatly as possible. Dictionaries may be used, and any notes which
you have written on your copy of the Passages for Study.
****
The preceding exercise qualifies as a synthesis task because the
student must achieve a novel organization of ideas. While he may,
have many ideas on the topic, and these may represent a consistent
viewpoint, he probably cannot produce from memory a coherent ar-
gument which will satisfy the specific stipulations of this assignment.
He must relate his argument to some specific reading passages dis-
tributed before the examination; he must apply knowledge drawn from
his own experience; he must consider related problems; and he must
develop a reasoned position with a specific audience in mind. In other
words, he must undertake a detailed analysis before he can begin to
organize his ideas into a coherent argument.

2. The following exercises can be used to test the abi.lity to make up


short stories. Each may be given as an oral or written exercise, with
or without much preparation on the part of the storyteller.

"Think of some time in your own life when you were up against a
difficulty, something that stood in your way and had tobe overcome.
Make up a story around this difficulty and tel1 it to the class. "

"Think of a plot based upon an obstacle that could occur between the
following two sentences, and then develop a short story using these
sentences and your plot. 11

lt was an event to be honored with a party, preferably a


surprise party ... "lt was a surprise, all right--a sur-
prise all the way around! "
****
Here the student draws upon past experience for suitable ideas. He
must produce and organize these to achieve such effects as build-up
and climax.
179

3. The exercises below can be used to test the ability to write poetry.
The student may be given a line and asked to complete a verse, or
he may be given a verse and asked to write a second verse.
"I saw old autumn in the misty morn" 3 {Add three lines to com-
plete this verse.)

"Shining like slugs,


The cars came fast; {Finish this description
Across the night of cars at night by add-
Their glances glowed; ing two lines.)
With purring hearts
Approached and passed"

"Men cannot swim (Add a second verse of


As fishes do, four lines. )
They only slave
A hard way through. 11

****
Here also the s_tudent must achieve a novel organization of ideas.
He must produce and organize them to form a whole consistent with
the parts already given.

4. A variety of exercises ranging from the fairly simple to the fairly


complex can be used in the schools to test ability to compose music:

Set a poem to music. (An appropriate one can be furnished the


student.)

Write a simple melodic line.

Write a composition with a single tonal base.

Write a composition using two tonal levels.

Write a specific work in a !arger form for any of the accepted medi-
ums of expression such as a chamber group, orchestra, chorus, or
piano. The c omposition should be of at least ten minutes' duration
and have received performance. Suggested designs are as follows:
a string quartet, a trio, or a sonata for violin or violoncello and
piano, or a work for full orchestra, or a dramatic work or a cantata
for so.los, chorus, and orchestra of at least fifteen minutes' duration.
(Thesis requirement for master's degree in music.)

****
All of these exercises seem to qualify as synthesis tasks. They
require a novel product- -something that the student cannot produce as
a whole from memory. While the elements in this case are musical
tones, and thus seem to be sensory in character, their arrangement
into combinations of tones and themes seems to represent a genuine
intellectual effort. The process of composing seems to involve the
testing of tones and combinations of tones against each other, as weil
3 R. M. W. Travers, "The Evaluation of the Outcomes of Teaching
in English," Journal of Experimental Education, Val. XXVII, 1948,
pp. 325-333.
180
as against the requirements of a particular type of music. In the
case of the first exercise above, the composer must comprehend the
elements in the poem- -particular ideas, moods, etc .• - -and try to
embody them in his music. When such a stimulus is not furnished,
of course, the composer must draw these elements from his own
experience.

5. 20 Production of a plan, or proposed set of operations

5. Several authorities were asked to participate in a round tab.le dis-


cussion of juvenile delinquency. They were given the fo.l.lowing data
about City X and for three of the communities, A, B, and C within
City X.
For City X For Com- For Com- For Com-
as a whole munity A munity B munity C

Juvenile Delinquency Rate


(annual arrests per 100
persons aged 5-19) 4. 24 18. l l. 3 4.1

Average Monthly Rental $60. 00 $42.00 $100. 00 $72. 00

Infant Death Rate (per


1000 births) 52. 3 76,0 32.l 56.7

Birth Rate (per 1000


inhabitants) 15. 5 16. 7 10.1 15.4

In addition, they were to.ld that in Community A the crimes against


property (burglary, etc.) constituted a relatively higher proportion of
the total juvenile offenses than in Communities Band C, where crimes
against persons (assault, etc.) were relatively greater.

(1) How would ~ explain the differences in these juvenile delinquency


rates in light of the above data? (You may make use of any theory or
material presented in the course. )
(2) In light of your explanation of the data what proposals would you
make for reducing the juvenile delinquency rate in each of the three
communities?
****
Conceivably, both questions of this exercise could qualify as pri-
marily synthesis tasks. The first might be considered as a demand
for hypothesis formulation, provided the phenomena reported upon have
not been previously studied. Ordinarily, however, this task would
represent application of generalizations acquired in social studies
courses. The response to the second question would depend closely
on the kind of explanation given to the first. The first question sets
the framework within which the student makes his proposals. Again,
if proposals have not been developed in a course, the student must
produce some which are consistent with his analysis of factors asso-
ciated with delinquency. lt is this process of selecting and organizing
181
means (courses of action) in relation to the desired ends (control or
reduction of delinquency) that qualüies the task as synthesis.

6, Design a simple drill jig for performing the last operation in the
production of the part shown in the accompanying drawing. The J.ast
operation is to "drill all holes." One thousand parts only are to be
made and XLO bushings 1/2" O. D. and 1/2" long are tobe used. 4
(l)esign not shown)

This exercise represents synthesis because the student must com-


bine two sorts of elements to produce a novel product: (l) specifica-
tions for the device, and (2) principles of design. The student has
some freedom in designing the device, provided it will perform the
required job satisfactorily.

7. A Problem in Chemical Process Design

The following problem was used in a course in chemical engineer-


ing. The student must prepare a process design which meets the
specifications outlined in the accompanying letter.

AJAX PETROLEUM CORPORA TION


Office of the Chief Engineer

March 5, 1951

To Process Engineering Division:

Our management has decided to increase the output of aviation gaso-


line base stock from our East Chicago Refinery. The only major addi-
tion to the refinery necessary will be a butane isomerization unit. The
engineering schedule requires that the process engineering and cost
estimate must be completed and the information transmitted to the
Mechanical Engineering Department by April 4, 1951. The process
design should be in our usual report form and include a flow diagram,
utilities required, equipment specifications, instrumentation, and draw-
ings of the plot plan and elevation. The isomerization process is to be
selected by you, and your choice should be supported by adequate argu-
ments and description.

Will you please proceed according to your best judgment based upon
the attached conditions.
Very truly yours,

AJAX PETROLEUM CORPORATION

4 From The Measurement of Understanding, The Forty-Füth Year-


book of the National Society for the Study of Education, Part I, Chicago:
The University of Chicago Press, 1946, pp. 299-300,
This problem and an accompanying check list were developed by
E. Rosenthal, Brooklyn Technical High Scheel.
182
A Problem in Chemical Process Design (continued)

Ajax Petroleum. Corporation


1000 BFSD Butane Isomerization Unit
East Chicago, Illinois
Job. 774

Site: 175 feet x 150 feet, level at NE corner of catalytic unit.


Soll bearing load 3000 lbs. /sq. ft. 6 feet below grade.

Feed Stock:

Source: De-ethani:t.ed cala.lylic cracker gas.

Pressure: 275 psig at battery limits.

Composition: lbs./hour

ethane 30
propane 2850
iso-butane 4560
n-butane 845
pentane 750
propylene 80
butylenes 140
water saturated

Yield: 1000 bbl./stream day 98% isobutane

Storage: 30 days product storage required

Utilities: water: available at 40 psig


72~F maximum summer temperature,
37 F minimum winter temperature.
Electricity: 110 v single phase and 220/ 440 3 phase.

Steam: 250 psig - 50°F superheat


5 psig - saturated

****
This problem involves synthesis of a number of elements: steps
in the chemical process, conditions of operation, utilities required,
equipment specifications, and instrumentation. Some of these elements
are given the student; others he must determine through proper analy-
sis and through application of principles. He must consider the above
elements in relation to one another and to the requirements of the pro-
cess design, and he must support his solution by adequate arguments.
While analysis and application enter this exercise to a great extent,
the student must organize a variety of ideas in order to accomplish
the design.
183
5. 30 Derivation of a set of abstract relations

8. Facts: Dry gases X and Y react readily when mixed in a glass flask.
lf, however, just before the gases are introduced, the flask is heated
strongly and cooled, no reaction takes place. lf a copper container is
used, no reaction occurs.

DIRECTIONS: Consider each hypothesis below in the light of the facts


above. If the hypothesis is untenable or is not stated in a way that could
be tested experimentally, blacken answer space A. Otherwise choose
the experiment which will best test the hypothesis and blacken the appro-
priate answer space.

Water is a necessary participant in the reaction.

A- Hypothesis is not tenable or cannot be tested experimentally.


B- Dry the flask without heating it before introducing the gases.
C- Leave the flask open after mixing the gases.
D- Moisten the walls of the copper container before introducing
the gases.
E- Heat the glass flask strongly, allow it to cool, and leave it
open for several days before introducing the gases.

Copper forms a stable compound with the gas X and prevents reac-
tion with the other gases.

A- Hypothesis is not tenable or cannot be tested experimentally.


B- Inspect the interior surface of the copper container with a
high-power microscope.
C- Increase the concentration of gas X in the copper container
and note whether the reaction begins.
D- Moisten the walls of the copper container before introducing
the gases.
E- Coat the interior with paraffin.

The reaction takes place by a simple collision of X and Y molecules


in the body of the gas.

A- Hypothesis is not tenable or cannot be tested experimentally.


B- Carry out the reaction in a glas:;, container whose interior is
lined with copper.
C- Carry out the reaction with gases X and Y dissolved in water.
D- Cover the interior of the flask with paraffin.
E- Increase the gas concentrations of gas X in a glass flask and
note whether the rate finally reaches a constant limiting va.lue.

The preceding seems to invo.lve synthesis in that the student must


relate several ideas. He must first of all draw some inferences to
account for the given phenomena--e.g., the reaction failed to take
place because heating drove off a necessary agent--water; or,because
heating affected the chemical condition of the glass in some way. For
question 1, he must ignore this second possibility by choosing an
experiment which tests sole ly the effect of water. This Operation,
184
incidentally, involves the application of an abstraction--the concept of
experi.Inental control. But the application occurs as a part of this
process of relating a number of ideas to account for the given mate-
rials, in this case, report of some specific physico-chemical phenom-
enon. In addition, the student must synthesize further by considering
some other hypotheses.

9. The formulation of reasonable hypotheses .5 A housing concern


has made some experi.Inents on methods of heating houses. A room was
constructed with walls that could be heated or refrigerated at the same
tune that air of any temperature was being circulated through the room.
Scveral individuals were asked to reconl lheir sensations as the condi-
tions were varied as follows:

Wall Air
Trial Temperature Temperature Sensations

1 85° 85° Uncomfortably hot


2 85° 50° Uncomfortably hot
3 70° 85° Comfortable
4 70° 70° Comfortable
5 70° 50° Comfortable
6 50° 50° Very cold
7 50° 70° Uncomfortably cold
8 50° 85° Cold

How can you explain the sensation of "co.ldness" by a person in a


room where the air temperature is 85° and the wall temperature is 50°
(all temperatures Fahrenheit)? Consider the following questions and
organize your thinking under the outline given below.

a) Make all the suggestions you can which you be.lieve will explain why
a person is cold in a room where the air temperature is 85° and the
wall temperature is 50°. Give your reasons as to why you believe
each of these suggestions will explain the phenomenon.

b) What kinds of evidence would you want to collect which would enable
you to decide among your suggested hypotheses?

c) Now go over the suggestions which you have made above and select
the one which you believe to be the "best" explanation and give your
reasons for your selection.

****
This exercise is similar to the preceding one. lt, too, requires
that the student relate a number of ideas to explain a phenomenon.
Question c) involves evaluation as defined in this Handbook.

6 Adapted from The Measurement of Understanding, The Forty- Fifth


Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, Part I,
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1946, p. 118.
6. 00--EVALUATION

Evaluation is defined as the making of judgments about


the value, for some purpose, of ideas, works, solutions,
methods, material, etc. lt involves the use of criteria as
well as standards for appraising the extent to which parti-
culars are accurate, effective, economica.l, or satisfying.
The judgments may be either quantitative or qualitative,
and the criteria may be either those determined by the stu-
dent or those which are given to him.

Evaluation is placed at this point in the taxonomy be -


cause it is regarded as being at a relative.ly late stage in a
complex process which involves some combination of all
the other behaviors of Knowledge, Comprehension, Appli-
cation, Analysis, and Synthesis. What is added are criteria
including values. Evaluation represents not only an end
process in dealing with cognitive behaviors, but also a ma-
jor link with the affective behaviors where values, .liking,
and enjoying (and their absence or contraries) are the cen-
tral processes involved. However, the emphasis here is
still largely cognitive rather than emotive.

Although Evaluation is placed last in the cognitive do-


main because it is regarded as requiring to some extent all
the other categories of behavior, it is not necessarily the
last step in thinking or prob.lern solving. lt is quite possi-
ble that the eva.luative process will in some cases be the
prelude to the acquisition of new knowledge, a new attempt
at comprehension or application, or a new analysis and
synthesis.

Man is apparently so constituted that he cannot refrain


from evaluating, judging, appraising, or valuing almost
everything which comes within his purview. Much of this
evaluating is highly egocentric in that the individual judges
things as they relate to himself. Thus, ideas and objects
which are useful to him may be evaluated highly, while ob-
jects which are less useful to him (but which may be ex-
tremely useful to others) are evaluated less highly. Al-
though utility is an important criterion for the individual's
evaluations, familiarity, lack of threat to self, status con-
siderations, and ease of comprehension may also form

185
186

criteria for judgments which are no less egocentric than


Utility,

For the most part, the evaluations customarily made


by an individual are quick decisions not preceded by very
careful consideration of the various aspects of the object,
idea, or activity being judged. These might more properly
be termed opinions rather than judgments. Customarily,
opinions are made at less than a fully conscious level and
the individual may not be fully aware of the clues or bases
on which he is forming his appraisals. For purposes of
classification, only those evaluations which are or can be
made with distinct criteria in mind are considered. Such
evaluations are highly conscious and ordinarily are based
on a relatively adequate comprehension and analysis of the
phenomena to be appraised. lt is recognized that this may
be far from the normal state of affairs. lt is, however,
based on a recognition that educational procedures are in-
tended to develop the more desirable rather than the more
customary types of behavior.

Although it is recognized that an individual is, on many


grounds, entitled to his own opinion as weil as his own
judgments about the value of specific ideas, objects, or
activities, one major purpose of education is to broaden the
foundation on which judgments are based. Thus, it is anti-
cipated that as a result of educational procedures, individu-
als will take into consideration a greater variety of facets
of the phenomena to be evaluated and that they will have in
mind a clearer view of the criteria and frames of reference
being used in the evaluation.

One type of evaluation can be marle largely on the basis


of internal standards of criticism. Such internal standards
are for the most part concerned with tests of the accuracy
of the work as judged by consistency, logical accuracy, and
the absence of internal flaws. lt is recognized that even
when a document, product, or work is perfectly accurate or
consistent on the basis of internal standards, it does not
necessarily constitute a work which can be valued highly
unless it also satisfies certain external standards. A sec-
ond type of evaluation may be based on the use of external
standards or criteria derived from a consideration of the
187

ends to be served and the appropriateness of specific means


for achieving these ends. Such evaluations are primarily
based on considerations of efficiency, economy, or utility
of specific means for particular ends. This type of evalua-
tion also involves the use of particular criteria which are re-
garded as appropriate for members of the class of phenom-
ena being judged, i. e., in terms of standards of excellence
or effectiveness commonly used in the field or in a compari-
son of particular phenomena with other phenomena in t h e
same field.
188

6. 1 O Judgments in terms of internal evidence

Evaluation of a communication from such evidence as


logical accuracy, consistency, and other internal criteria.
Formal education in a democracy has generally been ex-
tremely cautious in dealing with problems of evaluating,
especially in the social sciences and, to some extent, in
the humanities and natural sciences. Undoubtedly, this is
in !arge part dictated by the fear that the school might be
doing special pleading before the individual is really mature
enough to be fully informed about alternatives. lt is also
dictated by a belief that in a democracy each citizen is ex-
pected--especially on political problems--to consider the
major alternatives and then make his own decision. As a
result of this caution, evaluation objectives in the schools
have largely emphasized judgments about accuracy, usually
with reference to internal standards such as consistency,
logical accuracy, and the absence of particular internal
flaws.

After an individual has comprehended and perhaps ana-


lyzed a work, he may be called upon to evaluate it in terms
of various internal criteria. Such criteria are for the most
part tests of the accuracy of the work as judged by the logi-
cal relationships evident in the work itself. Has the writer
(or speaker) been consistent in his use of terms, does one
idea really follow from another, and do the conclusions
follow logically from the material presented? There are
other internal standards which may be used to determine
that there are no major errors in the treatment or report-
ing of data and that statements are made with some preci-
sion or exactness. lt is also possible to judge a work to
determine whether the manner in which the writer cites
sources or documents or the care with which particulars
are given is likely to yield a high probability of accuracy.
189

Evaluation--llustrative educational objectives

6.10 Judgments in terms of internal evidence

Judging by internal standards, the ability to assess


general probability of accuracy in reporting f a c t s
from the care given to exactness of statement, doc-
umentation, proof, etc.

The ability to apply given criteria (based on internal


standards) to the judgment of the work.

The ability to indicate logical fallacies in arguments.


190

6. 20 Judgments in terms of external criteria

Evaluation of material with reference to selected or


remembered criteria. --The criteria may be ends to be
satisfied; the techniques, rules, or standards by which such
works are generally judged; or the comparison of the work
with other works in the field. This type of evaluation in-
volves the classification of the phenomena in order that the
appropriate criteria for judgment may be employed. Thus,
a work of history is to be judged by criteria relevant to
historical works rather than to works of fiction. A rhetori-
cal work is tobe judged by criteria relevant to such works
rather than criteria appropriate to different kinds of verbal
presentations. Just so, a work of art may be judged by
many different criteria, depending upon the classification
of the work, e. g., representational, expressional, as com-
municating a particular message or idea, etc. All of this
involves the assumption that each phenomenon is a member
of a class and is tobe judged by criteria which are appro-
priate to that class. This also includes the possibility of
comparing a work with other members of the same class of
work.

lt should be pointed out that the classification of a work


and the evaluation of it in terms of the criteria appropriate
to the class involve some relatively arbitrary judgments.
Clearly a work is at one and the same time a member of
many different classes. Thus, an historical work may also
be a rhetorical, philosophical, or even poetic work. The
decision as to the class in which it is tobe evaluated does
not preclude it from being also evaluated as a member of
another class.

Quite frequently the external criteria are derived from


a member of the class which is considered to be a model
member in some respects (not necessarily the ideal or best
member). This may result in the judgments focusing on the
comparison of the two members of the class rather than on
the extent to which one member satisfies selected abstract
criteria.

This type of evaluation may also involve the classifica-


tion of a work with regard to the ends tobe achieved by the
191
work, followed by a judgment as to whether the means used
are appropriate to the ends in terms of efficiency, economy,
and utility. This involves the assumption that particular
means serve some specific ends better than others, and that
particular ends are best served by some specific means. lt
should be recognized that the major problem in many judg-
ments of this kind is what ends are to be considered. The
ends may be those conceived by the originator of the work
or idea, or they may be those deemed appropriate by the
critic. lt should also be recognized that a particular work
or idea may be evaluated in terms of many different means-
ends relationships. This may require the answering of the
following questions: Do the means employed represent a
good solution to the problem posed by the ends desired?
Are the means the most appropriate ones when the alterna-
tives are considered? Do the means employed bring about
ends other than those desired?
192

Evaluation--lllustrative educational objectives

6. 20 Judgments in terms of external criteria

The comparison of major theories, generalizations,


and facts about particular cultures.

Judging by external standards, the ability to compare


a work with the highest known standards in its field--
especially with other works of recognized excellence.

Skills in recognizing and weighing values involved in


alternative courses of action.

The ability to identify and appraise judgments and val-


ues that are involved in the choice of a course of ac-
tion.

The ability to distinguish between technical terminol-


ogy which adds precision to a text by permitting more
appropriate definition of terms, and that which merely
replaces a common name by an esoteric one.

The ability to evaluate health beliefs critically.

The ability to apply self-developed (aesthetic) stand-


ards to the choice and use of the ordinary objects of
the everyday environment.
193

Testing for Evaluation, and illustrative test items

6. 10 Judgments in terms of internal evidence

The major type of behavior for evaluation of this type


of judgment is that the individual, when given a new work,
is able to locate errors within it or is able to determine
what in the document is treated in such a way that it may be
regarded as internaily consistent. Thus, when given a com-
munication, the individual can judge i t correctly as being
consistent or inconsistent, accurate or inaccurate, carefully
done or carelessly written, etc. In addition to making an
over-all evaluation of the work with regard to accuracy, the
test problem may be posed in such a manner that the indi-
vidual is expected to cite the specific points within it which
are accurate or inaccurate as weil as the reasons why they
are judged in this way.

Although the individual may finally be e xp e c t e d t o


make some over-ail evaluation as to accuracy, the testing
problem is one of determining whether he is clearly aware
of the specific ways in which the material is accurate and
internally consistent or the flaws in it which make it inac-
curate or inconsistent. lt is possible for the testing tobe
concerned with relatively smail problems in which each of
the major types of possible errors or flaws may be tested
separately. This type of t es t ing may be used to infer
or predict the individual's ability to evaluate !arger works
where many of these points are included in complex combi-
nations. However, it would seem more economical from a
testing viewpoint as weil as more realistic and of higher
face validity to test for evaluation of accuracy on whole
problems which may involve evaluation of other types of ob-
jectives as well.

The other major problem in testing for evaluation of


accuracy is the question of the legitimacy of using recogni-
tion types of questions. Quite frequently t h e multiple-
choice or other recognition forms may call the examinee I s
attention to possible errors which he would not otherwise
note. The use of recognition forms of questions for this
194

class of objectives or behaviors must depend on evidence


that this technique is highly correlated with recall forms
of questions on the same points as well as on the j u d g -
ments of e:xperts and other evidence that the mental proc-
esses required are essentially those of evaluation about
accuracy rather than reactions to stimuli and c u es not
clearly relevant to this type of objective.

6. 20 Judgments in terms of external criteria

·fhis type of evaluation requires that the individual


have a relatively detailed knowledge of the class of phenom -
ena under consideration, that he know the criteria custom-
arily employed in judging such works or ideas, and that he
have some skill in the application of these criteria. In a
work of some complexity it is also necessary that the indi-
vidual be able to comprehend and analyze the work before
evaluating it.

The testing of this intellectual ability requires that


the individual be given some new work or idea to which spe-
cific criteria or ends may be applied. The problem may
vary from one in which the student is given a new work or
idea and asked to evaluate it to problems which are more
specific in that the individual is asked to evaluate it as a
member of a given class, or where he is asked to evaluate
it in comparison with another given work. The problem may
require that he make judgments of appropriate-inappropriate,
good-bad, or judgments of the degree to which particular
means-ends re.lationships are involved.
The amount of knowledge required for many evaluation
problems is very extensive, since the class of works, cri-
teria. for the class, ends tobe served, as weil as illustra-
tions of the class must be clearly in mind before the individ-
ual can apply external criteria to the judgment of a new work
or idea.

Althoügh a single final judgment may be an important


aspect of the problem, the simple recording of such an over-
ail judgment is ordinarily insufficient evidence of the qual-
ity of competence of the examinees in evaluation. lt is fre-
quently necessary to break down the problem into a series
of rather specific judgments as weil as analyses in order to
be sure that the entire process of evaluation is a competent
195
one or in order to find the types of errors and difficulties
encountered.

The types of evaluation discussed here are not fre-


quently used in secondary or collegiate education, As a
result of the lack of emphasis on these objectives and be-
haviors in the curriculum, little has been done to develop
appropriate testing techniques. Some illustrations are
available, but these are not the clearest or best techniques
possible. Most frequently the testing techniques used are
of the essay or recall type which do not focus sharply on
the behaviors desired. They do give the examinee an op-
portunity to demonstrate his competence, but they do not
necessarily evoke these behaviors; as a result, they are
not very efficient testing procedures. Furthermore,
available testing techniques do not permit much in the way
of analysis of errors made or even a very detailed analy-
sis of the methods by which such tests can be structured.
Perhaps the greatest value of the taxonomy at this point
is in pointing to the need for further study and de v e l op -
ment of testing techniques for measuring competence in
evaluating documenta, material, and works.
196
6. 00 - EVALUATION -- ILLUSTRATIVE TEST ITEMS

6.10 Judgments in terms of internal evidence


Given a problem, determine a logical conclusion and judge the
logical accuracy of statements in relation to the conclusion

Social Security officials sometimes face perplexing problems in study-


ing appeals for unemployment compensation. Some major-league base-
ball players in Ohio and Missouri decided in January that, because they
had not played ball since the end of the season, they had a right to con-
sider themselves unemployed. Although some of them were earning
good salaries of $8,000 to $10,000 a year in baseball, they maintained
that thcy were eutilled to the benefits of the unemployment section of
the Social Security Act.

Team owners urged these players not to app.ly for unemployment com-
pensation. According to the owners' interpretation, the players were
under contract all year around, although they worked and were p a i d
only during the playing season. On the other hand, the state officials
in Ohio and Missouri were inclined to agree with the players that they
were entitled to benefit payments.

Directions: Examine the conclusions given below. Assuming that


the paragraphs above give a fair statement of the problem, which one
of thc conclusions do ou think is justified.

Conclusions
A. The players were entitled to the benefits of the unemployment
section of the Social Security Act.
B. The players were not entitled to the benefits of the unemployment
section of the Socia!Security Act.
C. More information is needed to decide whether or not the players
were entitled to the benefits of the unemployment section of the
Social Security Act.

A: Statements which explain why your conclusion is


logical.
Mark in B: Statements which do not explain why your conclu-
column sion is logical.
C: Statements about which you are unable to decide.

Statements

1. The state officials are the ones who consider appeals for unemploy-
ment compensation, and their opinion carries more weight than the
opinions of team owners.

2. The Social Security Act may or may not provide that a man who
works and receives pay during only part of each year is unemployed
during the remaining part of the year.
197

3, The players argued indirectly (if others receive compensation,


why shouldn't we?) and forgot that others needed the compen-
sation more than they.

4. A changed definition may lead to a changed conclusion even


though the argument from each definition is logical.

5. No one who earns $8,000 a year or more should get unemploy-


ment compensation,

(Source: PEA Test 5.12)

6, 20 Judgments in terms of external criteria


Given possible bases for judgments about accuracy, recognize
criteria which are appropriate.

For items 6 - 11, assume that in doing research for a paper about the
English language you find a statement by Otto Jespersen which contra-
dicts some point of view on language which you have always accepted,
Indicate which of the statements would be significant in determining the
value of Jespersen's statement. For the purpose of these items, you
may assume that these statements are accurate.

Key: 1. Significant positively--i. e., might lead you to trust his state-
ment and to revise your own opinion.
2, Significant negatively--i. e., might lead you to distrust his
statement.
3. Has no significance.

6, Mr. Jespersen was Professor of English at Copenhagen


University.

7. The statement in question was taken from the very first


article that Mr. Jespersen published.

8. Mr. Jespersen's books are frequently referred to in other


works that you consult.

9. Mr. Jespersen's name is not included in the Dictionary of


American Scholars.

10. So far as you can find, Jespersen never lived in England or


the United States for any considerable period,

11. In your reading of other authors on the English language, you


find that several of them went to Denmark to study under
Jespersen,
198
Given a poem, determine criteria of evaluation which are ap-
propriate and apply them.

12. Since there 1s no help, come let us kiss and part;


Nay, I have done, you get no more of me,
And I am glad, yea glad with all my heart
That thus so cleanly I myself can free;
Shakehands forever, cancel all our vows,
And when we meet at any time again,
Be it not seen in either of our brows
That we one jot of former love retain.
Now at the last gasp of love's latest breath,
When, his pulse failing, passion speechless lies,
When faith is kneeling by his bed of death,
And innocence is closing up his eyes,
Now if thou wouldst, when all have given him over,
From death to life thou mightst him yet recover.

Write an essay of from 250 to 500 words, describing and evaluating the
foregoing poem. In your description you should employ such terms as
will reveal your recognition of formal characteristics of the poem.
Your principles of evaluation should be made clear--although they
should not be elaborately described or defended.

Take time to organize your essay carefully. Save time for revisions
and proof-reading so that the essay as it appears in your examination
booklet represents your best intention. lt is suggested that you give
20 minutes to planning, 80 to writing, and 20 to revising your essay.
Please try to write legibly.
199
Given a means-ends relationship, judge its validity and support
this judgment

13. Essay I
"The idea of liberty as formulated in the eighteenth century, al-
though valid enough forthat time, has in onefundamental respect ceased
tobe applicable to the situation in which we find ourselves. In the
eighteenth century the most obvious oppressions from which men suf-
fered derived from governmental restraints on the free activity of the
individual. Liberty was therefore naturally conceived in terms of the
emancipation of the individual from such restraints. In the economic
realm this meant the elimination of governmental restraints on the
individual in choosing his occupation, in contracting for the acquisition
and disposal of property, and the purchase and sale of personal serv-
ices. But in our time, as a result of the growing coi:p_plexities of a
technological society, (a) the emancipation of the individual from gov-
ernmental restraint in his economic activities has created new oppres-
sions, so that (b) for the majority of men liberty can be achieved only
by an extension of governmental regulation of competitive business
enterprise. 11

A. Defend or attack the truth of proposition (a) above. In doing this,


take into consideration specific conditions in the areas of economic
and political life in America from the Civil War to the present.
(Suggested time: 15 minutes)

B. Defend or attack the truth of proposition (b). In doing this, make


clear (i) what meaning you are giving tu "liberty" and "regulation,"
(ii) the precise position you are taking in regard to such problems
as distribution of income, monopoly, the effectiveness of a free
market to regulate our economy, and the possibilities of planning.
(Suggested time: 25 minutes)

Given an end, recognize the appropriateness of a particular means.


This assumes specific information about the phenomena involved.

lt may be worthwhile for the manufacturer of business goods to use


space in consumer media solely to have the opportunity to reach those
readers who as business men are interested in buying his product. Con-
sider each of the following business goods. On the answer sheet, oppo-
site the number which identified each product, blacken under column:
A- if such an approach would appear to provide enough worth-
while coverage to justify the expenditure;
B- if such an approach would not be likely to reach enough good
prospects to justify the expenditure.
14. Chevrolet automobile
15. Nationalrockdrills (mining industry)
16. Remington typewriters
1 7. Buckner textile machines
18. Hammermill Bond Paper
200

Given an end, recognize best of several means


19.
Many people believe that it would be better if our states had more uni-
form divorce laws. lt is recognized, however, that there are dangers
in an attempt to achieve such uniformity. Which one of the following
procedures would be most likely to avoid the greatest of these dangers?
A- An amendment to the U. S. Constitution is passed, which es-
tablishes the grounds for divorce tobe recognized in all courts.
B- A federal law is passed which sets forth the maximum grounds
which can be recognized by any state .
C- A commission appointed by the President works out standards
for a divorce code and encourages all states to consider these
standards in revising their laws.
D- A conference of state governors decides on a divorce code and
each governor attempts to have it made the law of his state.
E- The U. S. Supreme Court es tablishes a uniform set of practices
by ruling against all divorce laws which do not conform to its
standard.

Given a particular end, determine the means which will serve it


best
20.
Jane is faced with the problem of selecting material for a school dress.
The dress will receive lots of wear and will be laundered frequently.
Which of the fabrics would be her best choice? (The test should include
examples of fabrics, including some rayons, This would allow more
reasons to be given below. )
Check the qualities the fabric you choose possesses which make it supe-
rior for Jane's purpose.
____ (a) Material is colorfast to washing

____ (b) Material is crease resistant

____ (c) There is little or no sizing in the material.

____ (d) Material is easily cared for

____ (e) Material is soft and will drape easily

_ _ _ _ (f) Weave is firm, close and smooth

____ (g) Material is colorfast to sunlight

____ (h) Material will not show soll easily

_ _ _ (i) Design is printed with the grain


201
APPENDIX

Condensed Version of the


Taxonomy of Educational Objectives

Cognitive Domain

KNOWLEDGE

1. 00 KNOWLEDGE

Knowledge, as defined here, involves lhe recall of specifics and uni-


versals, .the recall of methods and processes, or the recall of a pattern,
structure, or setting. For measurement purposes, the recall situation
involves little more than bringing to mind the appropriate material. Al-
though some alteration of the material may be required, this is a rela-
tively minor part of the task. The knowledge objectives emphasize most
the psychological processes of remembering. The process of relating
is also involved in that a knowledge test situation requires the organiza-·
tion and reorganization of a problem such that it will furnish the appro-
priate signals and cues for the information and knowledge the individual
possesses. To use an analogy, if one thinks of the mind as a file, the
problem in a knowledge lest situation is that of finding in the problem
or task the appropriate signals, cues, and clues which will most effec-
tively bring out whatever knowledge is filed or stored.

1.10 KNOWLEDGE OF SPECIFICS


The recall of specific and isolable bits of information. The em-
phasis is on symbols with concrete referents. This material,
which is at a very low level of abstraction, may be thought of as
the elements from which more complex and abstract forms of
knowledge are built,

1.11 KNOWLEDGE OF TERMINOLOGY


Knowledge of the referents for specific symbols (verbal and
non-verbal). This may include knowledge of the most generally
accepted symbol referent, knowledge of the variety of symbols
which may be used for a single referent, or knowledge of the
referent most appropriate to a given use of a symbol.
*To define technical terms by giving their attributes,
properties, or relations.
*Familiarity with a large number of words in thel.r
common range of meanings.

1.12 KNOWLEDGE OF SPECIFIC FACTS


Knowledge of dates, events, pcr11on11, plu1.•i,11, 1•11·. '1'11111 111,1,v
include very precise ancl Hp1ictr1<, l111'11r11111t,l1111 1111,·li "" 11, ..
specific date or exact rnag11ltud1• of :i pl,11111111,,.111111. II 11111,1•
also include approximal.e or r,•l.al.lv,• l11for111ul 11111 r111d1 m1 1111

*illustrative educational objeclivc11 11d1,ct.,,d rrom 1.111• l ll.1• 1·ut 111·1•.


202
approximate time period or the general order of magnitude of
a phenomenon.
*The recall of major facts about particular cultures.
*The possession of a minimum knowledge about the organ-
isms studied in the laboratory.

1. 20 KNOWLEDGE OF WAYS AND MEANS OF DEALING WITH


SPECIFICS
Knowledge of the ways of organizing, studying, judging, and criti-
cizing. This includes the methods of inquiry, the chronological
sequences, and the standards of judgment within a field as weil as
the patterns of organization through which the areas of the fields
themselves are determined and internally organized. This knowl-
edge is at an intermediate level of abstraction between specific
knowledge on the one hand and knowledge of universals on the other.
lt does not so much demand the activity of the Student in using the
materials as it does a more passive awareness of their nature.

1. 21 KNOWLEDGE OF CONVENTIONS
Knowledge of characteristic ways of treating and presenting
ideas and phenomena. For purposes of communication and con-
sistency, workers in a field employ usages, styles, practices,
and forms which best suit their purposes and/or which appear
to suit best the phenomena with which they deal. lt should be
recognized that although these forms and conventions are likely
to be set up on arbitrary, accidental, or authoritative bases,
they are retained because of the general agreement or concur-
rence of individuals concerned with the subject, phenomena, or
problem.
*Familiarity with the forms and conventions of the major
types of works, e. g., verse, plays, scientific papers, etc.
*To make pupils conscious of correct form and usage in
speech and writing.

1. 22 KNOWLEDGE OF TRENDS AND SEQUENCES


Knowledge of the processes, directions, and movements of
phenomena with respect to time,
*Understanding of the continuity and development of American
culture as exemplified in American life.
*Knowledge of the basic trends underlying the development of
public assistance programs.
203

1. 23 KNOWLEDGE OF CLASSIFICATIONS AND CATEGORIES


Knowledge of the classes, sets, divisions, and arrangements
which are regarded as fundamental for a given subject field,
purpose, argument, or problem.
*To recognize the area encompassed by various kinds of
problems or materials.
*Becoming familiar with a range of types of literature.

1. 24 KNOWLEDGE OF CRITERIA
Knowledge of the cl'iteria hy which facls, principles, opin-
ions, and conduct are tested or judged.
*Familiarity with criteria for judgment appropriate to the
type of work and the purpose for which it is read.
*Knowledge of criteria for the evaluation of recreational
activit ie s •

1. 25 KNOWLEDGE OF METHODOLOGY
Knowledge of the methods of inquiry, techniques, and proce-
dures employed in a particular subject field as weil as those
employed in investigating particular problems and phenomena.
The emphasis here is on the individual1 s knowledge of the
method rather than his ability to use the method.
*Knowledge of scientüic methods for evaluating health
concepts.
*The student shall know the methods of attack relevant to
the kinds of problems of concern to the social sciences.

1. 30 KNOWLEDGE OF THE UNIVERSALS AND ABSTRACTIONS IN


A FIELD
Knowledge of the major schemes and patterns by which phenomena
and ideas are organized. These are the large structures, theories,
and generalizations which dominate a subject field or which are
quite generally used in studying phenomena or solving problems,
These are at the highest levels of abstraction and complexity.

1.31 KNOWLEDGE OF PRINCIPLES AND GENERALIZATIONS


Knowledge of particular abstractions which summarize obset·-
vations of phenomena. These are the abstractions whkh ;u••• ol'
value in explaining, describing, predicting, or in rl1)l:1•rrni11i.l11i
the most appropriate and relevant action or direcli.on l.o 111· 111111•11,
*Knowledge of the important principles by whl.c-h 1111.- ,·x·
perience with biological phenomena iH 11u11111111rl~c•II,
*The recall of major general.izal.i111111 nhoul 11111·1 li-111111·
cultures.
204
1. 32 KNOWLEDGE OF THEORIES AND STRUCTURES
Knowledge of the body of principles and generalizations together
with their interrelations which present ,a clear, rounded, and
systematic view of a complex phenomenon, problem, or field.
These are the most abstract formulations, and they can be used
to show the interrelation and organization of a great range of
specifics.
*The recall of major theories about particular cultures.
*Knowledge of a relatively complete formulation of the
theory of evolution.

INTELLECTUAL ABILITIES AND SKILLS

Abilities and skills refer to organized modes of operation and general-


ized techniques for dealing with materials and problems. The materials
and problems may be of such a nature that little or no specialized and
technical information is required. Such information as is required can
be assumed tobe part of the individual 1s general fund of knowledge.
Other problems may require specialized and technical information at a
rather high level such that specific knowledge and skill in dealing with
the problem and the materials are required. The abilities and skills
objectives emphasize the mental processes of organizing and reorganiz-
ing material to achieve a particular purpose. The materials may be
given or remembered,

2, 00 COMPREHENSION
This represents the lowest level of understanding. lt refers to a
type of understanding or apprehension such that the individual
knows what is being co·mmunicated and can make use of the mate-
rial or idea being communicated without necessarily relating it to
other material or seeing its fullest implications.

2. 10 TRANSLATION
Comprehension as evidenced by the care and accuracy with
which the communication is paraphrased or rendered from one
one language or form of communication to another. Transla-
tion is·judged on the basis of faithfulness and accuracy, that is,
on the extent to which the material in the original communica-
tion is preserved although the form of the communication has
been altered.
*The ability to understand non-literal statements
(metaphor, symbolism, irony, exaggeration).
*Skill in translating mathematical verbal material
into symbolic statements and vice versa.
205
2. 20 INTERPRETATION
The explanation or summarization of a communication. Where-
as translation involvcs an objcctivc part-for-part rendering of
a communication, intcrprctation involves a reordering, re-
arrangement, or a new view of the material.
*The ability to grasp the thought of the work as a whole
at any desired level of generality.
*The ability to interpret various types of social data.

2. 30 EXTRAPOLATION
The extension of trends or tendencies beyond the' given data to
determine implications, consequences, corollaries, effects,
etc., which are in accordance with the conditions described in
the original communication.
*The ability to deal with the conclusions of a work in terms
of the immediate inference made from the explicit state-
ments.
*Skill in predicting continuation of trends.

3.00 APPLICATION
The use of abstractions in particular and concrete situations. The
abstractions may be in the form of general ideas, rules of proce-
dures, or generalized methods. The abstractions may also be
technical principles, ideas, and theories which must be remem-
bered and applied.
*Application to the phenomena discussed in one paper of
the scientific terms or concepts used in other papers.
*The ability to predict the probable effect of a change in a
factor on a biological situation previously at equilibrium.

4.00 ANALYSIS
The breakdown of a communication into its constituent elements or
parts such that the relative hierarchy of ideas is made clear and/or
the relations between the ideas expressed are made explicit, Such
analyses are intended to clarify the communication, to indicate how
the communication is organized, and the way in which it manages
to convey its effects, as well as its basis and arrangement,

4, 10 ANALYSIS OF ELEMENTS
Identüication of the elements included in a communication.
*The ability to recognize unstated assumptions,
*Skill in distinguishing facts from hypotheses,
206
4, 20 ANALYSES OF RELATIONSIDPS
The connections and interactions between elements and parts
of a communication,
*Ability to check the consistency of hypotheses with
given information and assumptions.
*Skill in comprehending the interrelationships ii.mong
the ideas in a passage.

4, 30 ANALYSIS OF ORGANIZATIONAL PRINCIPLES


The organization, systematic arrangement, and st.ructure
which hold the communication together. This includes the
"explicit" as weil as "implicit" structure. lt includes the
bases, necessary arrangement, and the mechanics which
make the communication a unit,
*The ability to recognize form and pattern in literary or
artistic works as a means of understanding their meaning.
*Ability to recognize the general techniques used in persua-
sive materials, such as advertising, propaganda, etc.

5. 00 SYNTHESIS
The putting together of elements and parts so as to form a whole,
This involves the process of working with pieces, parts, elements,
etc„ and arranging and combining them in such a way as to con-
stitute a pattern or structure not clearly there before.

5, 10 PRODUCTION OF A UNIQUE COMMUNICATION


The development of a communication in which the writer or
speaker attempts to convey ideas, feelings, and/or experi-
ences to others.
*Skill in writing, using an excellent organization of ideas
and statements.
*Ability to teil a personal experience effectively.

5, 20 PRODUCTION OF A PLAN, OR PROPOSED SET OF


OPERATIONS
The development of a plan of work or the proposal of a plan of
operations, The plan should satisfy requirements of the task
which may be given to the student or which he may develop for
himself.
*Ability to propose ways of testing hypotheses.
* Ability to plan a unit of instruction for a particular
teaching Situation,
207

5.30 DERIVATION <.W /1 H!•:T 01•' __ {\BSTltACT RELATIONS


The developmenl. ol' a iwl. or almlrad relations either to classify
or explain pa1·l.i.i:ul.:u· rlala oc· phcnomena, or the deduction of
propositions arui rdal.ions from a set of basic propositions or
symbolic representatinns.
*Ability to formulate appropriate hypotheses based upon an
analysis of factors involved, and to modify such hypothe-
ses in the light of new factors and considerations •
,
.
*Ability to make mathematical discoveries and generalizations.

6. 00 EVALUATION
Judgments about the value of material and methods for given pur-
poses. Quantitative and qualitative judgments about the extent to
which material and methods satisfy criteria. Use of a standard
of appraisal. The criteria may be those determined by the stu-
dent or those which are given to him.

6.10 JUDGMENTS IN TERMS OF INTERNAL EVIDENCE


Evaluation of the accuracy of a communication from such evi-
dence as logical accuracy, consistency, and other internal
criteria.
*Judging by internal standards, the ability to assess gen-
eral probability of accuracy in reporting facts from the
care given to exactness of statement, documentation,
proof, etc.
*The ability to indicate logical fallacies in arguments.

6. 20 JUDGMENTS IN TERMS OF EXTERNAL CRITERIA

Evaluation of material with reference to selected or re-


membered criteria.
*The comparison of major theories, generallzations,
and facts about particular cultures.
*Judging by external standards, the ability to compare a
work with the highest known standards in its field--
especially with other works of recognized excellence.

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