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Description

Making Thinking Visible in Education

Main Themes:

Most Important Ideas and Facts:

Problem: Vague phrases like "demonstrate the ability to think critically" or "students will think critically" are not measurable and therefore difficult to assess.

Solution:

  1. Define the thinking process: Break down complex cognitive skills (like critical thinking) into specific components (e.g., analyzing arguments, evaluating evidence).
  2. Use observable verbs from Bloom's Taxonomy: Choose action verbs that align with the desired thinking skills (e.g., analyze, evaluate, create).
  3. Design assessments that showcase thinking: Create assignments that require students to demonstrate their thinking through observable outputs (e.g., essays, presentations, debates).

Quote: "Instead of vague outcomes like 'students will think critically,' use precise, measurable objectives tied to specific skills and outputs. This ensures that critical thinking can be effectively taught, assessed, and demonstrated in educational practice."

Problem: The common student phrase "I don't understand" is ambiguous and hinders effective communication between teachers and students.

Solution: Encourage students to use Bloom's Taxonomy verbs to articulate their learning challenges:

Benefits of using Bloom's Taxonomy language:

Overall Takeaway: By intentionally incorporating Bloom's Taxonomy into learning objectives and classroom communication, educators can foster a more measurable, reflective, and effective learning environment for both themselves and their students.