This course will help you apply various graphic organizers to each level of the Revised Bloom's Taxonomy to scaffold student thinking and support academic progress.
This teacher professional development course teaches you about cognitive thinking by analyzing each level of the Revised Bloom's Taxonomy. You will explore how to support student cognition through various graphic organizers that can help scaffold student thinking. You will learn about appropriate support methods aligned with the correct cognitive level of your lesson objective. You will be able to better evaluate student thinking through provided or self-generated graphic organizers. By the end of the course, you will have a plan for support in an upcoming lesson and access to downloadable graphic organizers that can support each Bloom's Taxonomy level, ready to be used in your classroom.
Requirements:
Hardware Requirements:
- This course can be taken on either a PC, Mac, or Chromebook.
Software Requirements:
- PC: Windows 10 or later.
- Mac: macOS 12 or later.
- Browser: The latest version of Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox is preferred. Microsoft Edge and Safari are also compatible.
- Microsoft Word Online
- Adobe Acrobat Reader
- Software must be installed and fully operational before the course begins.
Other:
- Email capabilities and access to a personal email account.
- Editing of a Microsoft Word document is required in this course. You may use a free version of Microsoft Word Online, or Google Docs if you do not have Microsoft Office installed on your computer. Model Teaching can provide support for this.
Instructional Material Requirements:
The instructional materials required for this course are included in enrollment and will be available online.
- Cognitive Thinking and Bloom's Taxonomy
- Learn what cognitive thinking is and how the Revised Bloom's taxonomy describes different levels of learning in your students. Also learn how to scaffold using graphic organizers to help target student thinking.
- Graphic Organizer Examples that Support Bloom's Taxonomy
- The cognitive processes associated with each level of Bloom's Taxonomy and examples of graphic organizers that can be utilized to support cognitive thinking at a specific level of Bloom's.
- Incorporating Graphic Organizers into Lessons
- Learn how to assign the correct cognitive process level to your lesson objective, how to choose an appropriate graphic organizer, and when to utilize graphic organizers in your lesson.
- Assessing Graphic Organizers
- Learn how to assess your students' use of graphic organizers and how to select the right assessment for your lesson plan and organizer.
- Putting it All Together
- Using the sample provided, build your own action plan to utilize graphic organizers at the appropriate cognitive level in an upcoming lesson.
- Applying What you Have Learned
- Get ideas on how to implement the concepts into your classroom, find a list of online resources that feature other graphic organizer ideas, and read the research behind student cognition and methods for scaffolding.
What you will learn
- Understand the Revised Bloom's Taxonomy of learning and how it relates to cognitive processes
- Evaluate the applications of graphic organizers at each level of Bloom's Taxonomy
- Analyze the process for selecting or developing the correct graphic organizer for your objective, cognitive level, and lesson purpose
- Assess student thinking and learning through the evaluation of graphic organizers
How you will benefit
- Your lessons will be more organized and clearer to your students, with explicit support in helping them develop their cognitive thinking
- You will have a better understanding of how to support student cognition related to each level of Bloom's Taxonomy as you analyze your lesson objectives
- You will be able to monitor and track student cognitive growth more efficiently to ensure students are learning at the highest levels
Self-Study