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Showing posts with label Teacher Education in Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teacher Education in Pakistan. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Impact Of Recent Changes In The Teacher Education System Of Pakistan On Teachers’ Competencies | Teacher Education in Pakistan | Solved Assignment 8626 | AIOU

 QUESTION 

Q 3. a) Highlight the impact of recent changes in the teacher education system of Pakistan on teachers’ competencies.

Course: Teacher Education in Pakistan
Course code 8626
Level: B.Ed (1.5 Years)
Solved Assignment

Answer:

The rapid changes and increased complexity of today’s world present new challenges and put new demands on our education system. There has been generally a growing awareness of the necessity to change and improve the preparation of students for productive functioning in the continually changing and highly demanding environment. In confronting this challenge it is necessary to consider the complexity of the education system itself and the multitude of problems that must be addressed. Clearly, no simple, single-uniform approach can be applied with the expectation that significant improvements to the system will occur.

Indeed, any strategy for change must contend with the diverse factors affecting the education system, the interactions of its parts, and the intricate interdependencies within it and with its environment. As we consider these problems, we become increasingly cognizant of the various possibilities of using concepts and methods of the study of complex systems for providing direction and strategies to facilitate the introduction of viable and successful changes. A key insight from complex systems is that simple solutions are not likely to be effective in cases such as the education system and that providing a balance or coexistence of what seem to be opposites may provide the greatest opportunities for successful courses of action. In the following we consider


• Integrating the commonly polarized goals of education; i.e. the goal that focuses on transmitting knowledge with the goal that emphasizes the development of the individual student.

• Adapt teaching to different student characteristics by using diverse methods of teaching. Adaptation to the ability levels, patterns of different abilities, learning styles, personality characteristics, and cultural backgrounds.

• Integrating the curriculum by developing interdisciplinary curriculum units that enable students to acquire knowledge from different disciplines through a unifying theme while having the opportunity to contribute in different and unique ways to the objectives of the integrated units.

Educational Goals

The approaches to teaching can be categorized according to major educational goals that affect teaching strategies. On one hand, the goal of education is viewed as the transmission of knowledge by the teachers to the students. On the other hand, the goal of education is viewed as facilitating students’ autonomous learning and self-expression. The former approach which converges toward the teaching of the specified subject matter may be termed ‘convergent’ teaching. The latter approach which stresses open-ended self-directed learning may be termed ‘divergent’ teaching. The convergent approach is highly structured and teacher-centered; the students are passive recipients of knowledge transmitted to them and learning achievements are measured by standardized tests. The divergent approach is flexible, and student-centered, where the students are active participants in the learning process and learning achievements are assessed by a variety of evaluation tools such as self-evaluation in parallel to teacher evaluation; documentation portfolios; and special projects

In the highly complex education system, there may be various combinations of different approaches to teaching and probably no ‘pure’ convergent or divergent teaching. Still, the tendency in the education system of today is toward the convergent approach. In fact, among the current suggestions for implementing educational reforms to deal with the considerable problems of the education system, there has been a strong emphasis on setting convergent goals, an aspect of which is the use of across-the-board standardized testing. Testing has been commonly viewed as a prudent way to determine the success or failure of the teaching and learning process. There has been relatively limited use of other means of evaluation which are more complicated and more demanding in terms of application and interpretation.

As educators seek ways to meet the demands put upon the education system in today’s world of rapid changes and ever-increasing complexity, it may be helpful to recognize that there is a need for both convergent and divergent approaches to teaching and learning.

Educators who stress the importance of the acquisition of specific knowledge as a useful way to prepare students for productive future functioning must realize that even for the purpose of this goal alone, a divergent approach is needed today. With the great proliferation of knowledge and rapid changes in most fields as well as the appearance of many new fields, it is critical to developing students’ capacity for self-directed learning and self-growth. On the other hand, those who emphasize the importance of autonomous growth and creative self-expression must realize that the students need academic skills (such as reading, writing, calculating, etc.) as prerequisites for productive self-expression

Since the creative process involves new ways of using existing knowledge, it is important to provide opportunities for students to acquire such knowledge (which can be acquired by convergent teaching). Hence, convergent and divergent teaching strategies are both needed and the challenging question is how to find the balance between them within the complexity of the process of teaching and learning. It is likely that the two approaches may increasingly become not mutually exclusive but interrelated and interdependent.

An important development is a growing awareness that academic achievement could improve by adapting teaching to students' individual differences. This awareness is finding its most distinct expression in the education system’s attempts to deal with the issues of students with special needs. However, other aspects of adaptation to students’ individual differences get far less attention.

In general, adaptation to individual differences under convergent teaching tends to be limited. The students are all expected to strive toward one goal of learning specified required knowledge; some may attain it and others may fall by the wayside or be given some remediation with limited results. Nevertheless, there are various possibilities of effective adaptation to individual differences under convergent teaching. In addition to

adaptation in the rate of learning, where each student can be allowed to work at his/her own pace, there are many possibilities of adaptation through the use of diverse methods of teaching. Even when all the students are taught the same material, teachers can use different methods, different techniques, or different media, to cater to individual differences in abilities and personality characteristics. Such a ‘multi-convergent’ approach can be more effective in giving the students opportunities to use their aptitudes and inclinations for learning and attaining higher achievements. As the students experience success and consequently a sense of competence, their motivation is enhanced to pursue further learning. Such an approach has a better potential for success than the common reality of students with learning difficulties, who often struggle through remediation with a sense of inadequacy and discouraging experiences of failure.



Saturday, September 17, 2022

Teaching Methods and Techniques Recommended by Muslim Scholars | The Usability of These Methods in the Current Teaching-Learning Environment | Teacher Education in Pakistan | B.ED Course Code 8626 | AIOU |

 Q 2. b) Highlight the teaching methods and techniques recommended by Muslim scholars. Discuss the usability of these methods in the current teaching-learning environment?

Course: Teacher Education in Pakistan
Course code 8626
Level: B.Ed (1.5 Years)
Solved Assignment

Answer:

The very first teachers were commissioned by the Prophet, and like him, they taught for free. Next to him, they were the architects of an educated society whose leaders were truly its teachers. Members of this society, the teachers, and the taught were collectively and individually responsible for upholding its moral standards and correcting lapses: `bidding to honor, forbidding dis honor.' The number of kuttabscut tabs(learned) and mallams (teachers) in the Muslim world increased rapidly and on a large scale until almost every village had its own kuttab if not more than one. In Palermo, for example, Ibn Hawqal on his visit to Sicily claimed to have counted about 300 elementary teachers.

 A contemporary of Caliph Umar's, Jubayr b. Hayya, who was later an official and governor, was a teacher in a school in Taif. Famous men like al-Hadjadd and the poets al-Kumayt and al-Tirimmah are said to have been schoolmasters. In the search for knowledge, al-Faruqi insists, `everybody felt himself to be a conscript.' In early times it was thought wrong to take payment for teaching, especially the Qur'an and religion.

This was carried to extremes; a man fell into a well and would not let a pupil pull him out, lest this should be considered payment for his teaching. A scholar bought some things at a shop, more than he could comfortably carry, so the shopkeeper offered to carry some for him. On the way, the shopkeeper asked a question. Before he would answer it, the scholar took from him what he was carrying. The voluntary help would have become payment.

A youth studied the traditions without paying any fee, but when he asked to read al-Mutanabbi with the commentary of Abu Zakariya, his teacher demanded a fee because it was poetry; the boy's father paid five dinars in advance. A man took a mithqal of silver a day for teaching someone the Qur'an; the instruction lasted for five or six months but in the end, the money was returned to the student because the payment had been only a test of his zeal.


How were these scholars able to devote so much to the performance of such intellectual feats? According to Pedersen, it was largely because most of them lived a life of 'great contentment.' Learning, the life of the intellect, was 'intimately bound up with religion, and to devote oneself to both afforded an inner satisfaction and was [a] service to God [...] it not only made men of letters willing to accept deprivation; even more, it prompted others to lend them aid.'

The Mosques received a wide variety of aid and grants for scholars from a
a number of institutions. `No matter what their social origins, the subsistence of the scholars was assured, often in ‘liberal measures'.' Caliph Umar (12-23 A.H./634-644CE) is famed for his saying: `Teach your boys swimming, archery, horsemanship, famous proverbs; and the good of poetry.' Another public curriculum is ascribed to Ibn al-Tawam who is recorded to have said: `To do their duty towards their sons, fathers must educate them with writing, arithmetic, and swimming.' When those who had learned the Qur'an took up the task of educating children, the Qur'an became the Centre of this elementary course. Learning the Qur'an then preceded everything, and next came religious instruction. With grammar and arithmetic, the primary course was concluded.


Ibn al-Hajj (d. 736H/1336CE) has much to say about the school in general as here summed up by Tritton: ‘The schools should be the Bazar or a busy street, not in a secluded place. The emphasis on publicity is strong; the master must not send an elder boy to his house with a message lest rumor should start about the relations of the boy with the womenfolk. The Mosque is no place for a school for some people send little boys to school to get them out of the way and such children defile their clothes and the place where the Qur'an is taught.

 A school is a place for teaching, not an eating house, so the boys should not bring food or money to buy it, but should go home for meals. A check should be kept on the time taken for the trip to prevent idleness. One reason for this ruling is respect for the feelings of poor boys who might be jealous of the food brought by the well-to-do. If food had to be brought, the master might not share it with the boys nor send any of it to his house. He might take their leavings or if a boy ate none of his food, he might have it all but, in either case, he must tell the parents.'


From the early times, renowned scholars taught in schools. Thus Dahak ibn Muzahim, the exercise, traditions, and grammarian, who died in either 105H/723CE) or 106H/724 CE, had a school in Kufa, said to have been attended by 3,000 children, where he used to ride up and down among his pupils on an ass. As language was of the utmost importance, we find a Bedouin being appointed and paid as a teacher of the youth in Basra [26]. Writers of that period were not class-based but came from all walks of life. For example, al-Ahmar (d. 194H/810CE), who taught the children of Harun al-Rashid, gave his lectures drenched in musk and incense and supplied his audience with all necessary writing materials. His contemporary, al-Farra, however, was modestly dressed and sat on the floor, while his audience squatted in the dust in front of him. Normally the author would sit cross-legged with his listeners seated in a circle. Next to him would be his most
trusted student who would faithfully transcribe all that his teacher said.

Sunday, September 4, 2022

Responsibilities of a Teacher to Provide References from Islamic Sources. |Teacher Education in Pakistan | Course code 8626 |AIOU | B.Ed Solved Assignment

Q 2. a) Highlight the responsibilities of a teacher to provide references from Islamic Sources.

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A right can be interpreted as an authority or power that ethically one can work, own, abandon, use or demand something. The right can also mean a calling of the will of others to the mediator of reason, contrary to the power or physical strength to recognize the authority that exists on the other. Every human has a right, so the teacher has some rights too. The teacher is the one who gives knowledge to the learners. Teachers in the community view are those who carry out education in certain places (not only in formal educational institutions) teachers have heavy duties and responsibilities.

The teacher is a leading figure. “And among men and moving creatures and the cattle (are) various [their] colors likewise. Only fear Allah among His slaves those who have knowledge. Indeed, Allah (is) All-Mighty, Oft-Forgiving.” (Fatir 35:28) Teachers have spent time with learners in educating the nation’s children so that teachers have some rights like below.

1. Lead his pupil

The duty of a teacher is to make her pupils become smarter and have a good akhlaq. In this case, the teacher should lead his pupils to obtain the objectives that they are looking for. “From Ibnu Umar RA said: The Messenger of Allah said: each of you is a shepherd and each responsible for the shepherd: the leader is a shepherd, the husband is a shepherd to his family members, and his wife is a shepherd in the middle of her husband’s household and against her. Every one of you is a shepherd, and each is responsible for what is the shepherd. “(H.R.
Bukhari Muslim) 

2. Salary/wge

Regarding the receipt of this salary at first, there was a dispute. Regarding this salary, the pikers and philosophers differ in the opinion of the teacher receiving the salary or rejecting it. The most famous who refused to receive a salary is Socrates, then followed by the Muslim philosophy of al-Ghazali, concluding forbidden salaries. While Al-Qabisi has different opinions, he considers receiving the salary may be held. Al-qabisi’s reason, teachers receive salaries because educators have become professionals, of course, they are entitled to get prosperity in economic life, in the form of salary or honorarium.

Teachers are part of the state apparatus that serves the benefit of the State through the education sector, appointed civil servants, given salaries and educational personnel allowances. But if compared with developed countries, the income is not satisfactory but the task is noble, not an obstacle for teachers in educating students. For teachers whose status is non-civil servants then they are on the salary of the foundation, not even a few do not get it but they still serve in order to seek Allah SWT pleasure. “Give a worker his wages before his sweat is dry.” (HR Ibnu Majah)

3. Getting the award and appreciation

The teacher is the spiritual father of the students. He is the one who provides spiritual nourishment and improves the behavior of learners. That is the profession of teachers must be honored, given its very significant role in preparing future generations. Respecting teachers means respect for our children. A nation that wants to advance is a nation that is able to give awards and respect to teachers.

4. Give his pupil a lesson

It is the duty of the teacher to give his pupil a lesson. This lesson will make his pupils more knowledgeable and smarter. There should not be an intervention for the teacher to give the lesson.“As We sent among you a Messenger from you (who) recites to you Our verses and purifies you and teaches you the Book and the wisdom and teaches you what not you were knowing.” (Al-Baqarah 2:151)

5. Give his pupil a direction

Pupils are like people that don’t know a direction and still do not know anything. As a teacher, he should give his pupils a direction and make them a clear path in the future. “You will not achieve that science except with six things. I will explain to you broadly: intelligently, earnestly, patiently, there is the provision, there is a guiding teacher and a long time. ” (Burhanuddin al-Zarnuji)

6. Have the freedom of expression

The teacher should have freedom of expression because how a teacher can transfer his knowledge to his pupils without freedom? Obstacles and interventions should be cleared. “I am the servant of the man who taught me a letter. If he wants to sell me and can also set me free. “ (Sayyidina Ali r.a.)

7. Judge which is the right and the wrong one

There are some cases that make the teacher should choose between two options. As the pupils, they need to accept the judgment of the teacher.
“Indeed, Allah orders you to render the trusts to their owners, and when you judge between the people to judge with justice. Indeed, Allah excellently advises you with it. Indeed, Allah is All-Hearing, All-Seeing.” (An-Nisa 4:58)

8. Get respect from people

The words of Allah and the words of the Apostle describe the high position of the one who has knowledge (teacher). It is argued that knowledge can lead people to always think and analyze the nature of all phenomena that exist in nature, so as to bring people closer to Allah. With the ability that exists in humans are born theories for the benefit of human beings. So, we need to respect the teacher who is willing to give us the knowledge.“Stand up and respect the teacher and reward him, a teacher is almost like an Apostle.” (Syauki)

9. Accept or reject a gift

Teachers should avoid livelihoods that are contemptible in the view of Syria and away from situations that can bring slander and not do something that can drop the price in the eyes of the people. They also need to choose carefully between accepting or rejecting a gift from the parents or pupils to avoid slander.
“O you who believe[d]! Eat from (the) good (of) what We have provided you and be grateful to Allah if you alone worship Him.” (Al-Baqarah 2:172) 

10. Advise his pupil

 The teacher should advise and correct those who do not maintain good manners in class, such as insulting friends, laughing loudly, sleeping, talking to friends, or not accepting the truth. By doing this, the teacher can create good behavior and akhlaq for his pupils.

Thursday, February 4, 2021

Difference among sociograms, social distance scale | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

Q 1: Elaborate the difference among sociograms, social distance scale, and guess who questionnaire in terms of their use.

CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Answer:

A sociogram is a visual representation or map of the relationships between individuals. Learn more about sociograms from examples and test your knowledge with a quiz.

Definition of Sociogram


Suppose you are a seventh-grade teacher. There are ten students in your classroom: Mike, Olivia, Connor, Tracy, Lena, Darren, James, Tiona, Lisa, and Taylor. You notice that your male and female students have not been getting along well in recent weeks. You are interested in looking at the relationships between your students to help you understand what is going on in your classroom. 


One method that can help you examine relationships is creating a sociogram.


A sociogram is a visual depiction of the relationships among a specific group. The purpose of a sociogram is to uncover the underlying relationships between people. A sociogram can be used to increase your understanding of group behaviors.


How Do You Create a Sociogram?


Before you begin to create a sociogram of the students in your classroom, you must first come up with a criterion, which is what you want to measure. The criterion that you use is usually some question about a specific type of social interaction. A criterion can be either positive or negative.


Positive criteria are those that ask the students to choose something that they either enjoy or would like to participate in with others. Negative criteria ask students to choose something that they would not enjoy. Negative criteria are used to discover resistance or rejection in interpersonal relationships.


Examples of positive criteria that can be used to create a sociogram are:


  • Which three classmates would you most like to go on a vacation with?
  • Which three classmates are your best friends?
  • Which three classmates do you like the most?

Examples of negative criteria that can be used to create a sociogram are:


  • Which three classmates would you least enjoy going on a vacation with?
  • Which three classmates do you like to be around the least?
  • Which three classmates would you least like to be stranded on an island with?
Once your students have all answered the question, you tabulate the results and use them to create a sociogram. Sociologist R.E. Park (1923) coined the term social distance for the first time while describing the observed fact that the kinds of situations in which contact occurs between a dominant group and subordinates vary in their degree of intimacy, from Kinship by marriage, residence in the same neighborhood, work in the same occupation to absolutely no contact.


Emory Bogardus, an eminent sociologist at the University of Southern California in 1942 developed a scale for measuring the social distances among various groups in the United States. It was further given prominence by Katz and Allport under the able guidance of Gallet and Bogardus.


Bogardus was interested in measuring racial attitudes, and attitudes of people towards different races, towards different nationalities and comparing them through his social distance scale. The procedure for the construction of the scale is as follows:

The investigator first formulates various statements indicating different degrees of acceptance or rejection of the group.

The subject has to indicate how close or how far away he is from the members of the other group. A distance is measured by these statements which are basically psychological. A favorable attitude is indicated by closeness and an unfavorable attitude is indicated by distance. The greater the distance the greater the unfavorable attitude and the less the distance the greater the favorable attitude.



The psychological distance is progressively increased in the scale as one proceeds from the first to
the last statement starting from close kinship by marriage to exclusion from the country. Bogardus thus asked the respondents to indicate to which of the following steps they would admit members of the various groups in the United States of America.


Guess who questionnaire in terms of their use


This worksheet includes prompt questions to help students play the game 'Guess Who?'. It is for the beginner level. The worksheet includes short questions and descriptions of people. It is to help students complete a meaningful speaking activity where they have to guess the identity of their partner's character based on questions about their appearance. The game can be played with 2 or more players.




Related Topics 


Saturday, January 9, 2021

The procedure for development of multiple choice tests items and assembling the test prepare ten multiple choice items from subject of your choice | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

Q 5:  Briefly describe the procedure for the development of multiple-choice test items assemble the test and prepare ten multiple-choice items from the subject of your choice.

CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Answer:

Multiple choice test questions, also known as items, can be an effective and efficient way to assess learning outcomes. Multiple choice test items have several potential advantages:

Versatility: 

Multiple choice test items can be written to assess various levels of learning outcomes, from basic recall to application, analysis, and evaluation. Because students are choosing from a  set of potential answers, however, there are obvious limits on what can be tested with multiple-choice items. For example, they are not an effective way to test students’ ability to organize thoughts or articulate explanations or creative ideas.


Reliability: 

Reliability is defined as the degree to which a test consistently measures a learning outcome. Multiple-choice test items are less susceptible to guessing than true/false questions, making them a more reliable means of assessment. The reliability is enhanced when the number of MC items focused on a single learning objective is increased. In addition, the objective scoring associated with multiple choice test items frees them from problems with scorer inconsistency that can plague the scoring of essay questions.


Validity: 

Validity is the degree to which a test measures the learning outcomes it purports to measure. Because students can typically answer a multiple-choice item much more quickly than an essay question, tests based on multiple-choice items can typically focus on a relatively broad representation of course material, thus increasing the validity of the assessment. The key to taking advantage of these strengths, however, is the construction of good multiple-choice items.


A multiple-choice item consists of a problem, known as the stem, and a list of suggested solutions, known as alternatives. The alternatives consist of one correct or best alternative, which is the answer, and incorrect or inferior alternatives, known as distractors.



Constructing an Effective Stem

1. The stem should be meaningful by itself and should present a definite problem. A stem that presents a definite problem allows a focus on the learning outcome. A stem that does not present a clear problem, however, may test students’ ability to draw inferences from vague descriptions rather than serving as a more direct test of students’ achievement of the learning outcome.




2. The stem should not contain irrelevant material, which can decrease the reliability and the validity of the test scores (Haldyna and Downing 1989)


3. The stem should be negatively stated only when significant learning outcomes require it. Students often have difficulty understanding items with negative phrasing (Rodriguez 1997). If a significant learning outcome requires negative phrasing, such as the identification of dangerous laboratory or clinical practices, the negative element should be emphasized with italics or capitalization.



4. The stem should be a question or a partial sentence. A question stem is preferable because it allows the student to focus on answering the question rather than holding the partial sentence in working memory and sequentially completing it with each alternative (Statman 1988). The cognitive load is increased when the stem is constructed with an initial or interior blank, so this construction should be avoided.






Related Topics 


Saturday, January 2, 2021

Compare the Blooms taxonomy with SOLO Taxonomy of educational objectives. | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

     


Q 4:  Compare Bloom's taxonomy with the SOLO Taxonomy of educational objectives.


CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Topic: Bloom taxonomy with SOLO Taxonomy of educational objectives


Answer:

The reasons why we prefer to use SOLO Taxonomy


The SOLO Taxonomy (Biggs & Collis, 1982), provides a measure of cognitive learning outcomes or understanding of thinking, that, in my experience, teachers have felt comfortable adopting. This hierarchical model is comprehensive, supported by objective criteria, and used across different subjects and on differing types of assignments (Hattie & Purdie, 1998). 
Teachers enjoy the way that SOLO represents student learning of quite diverse material in stages of ascending structural complexity, and that these stages display a similar sequence across tasks. Furthermore, surface or deep levels of understanding can be planned for and assessed by coding a student’s thinking performance against unstructured, multi-structural, relational, or extended abstract categories, as shown in Table 1. Using visual symbols to represent levels of understanding in SOLO means that coding for the complexity of thinking can be undertaken by both student and teacher, allowing “where should we go next?” decisions and thinking interventions to more accurately target student learning needs. Hook, P. 2006 A Thinking Curriculum NZCER p100


Notes from Professor John Hattie

Course 224: Assessment in the Classroom (The University of Auckland)
"Creating best tests using Bloom's taxonomy or the SOLO classification."


Critique of Bloom's taxonomy

The taxonomy was published in 1956, has sold over a million copies, has been translated into several languages, and has been cited thousands of times.  The Bloom taxonomy has been extensively used in teacher education to suggest learning and teaching strategies, has formed the basis of many tests developed by teachers (at least while they were in teacher training), and has been used to evaluate many tests.  It is thus remarkable that the taxonomy has been subject to so little research or evaluation.

Most of the evaluations are philosophical treatises noting, among other criticisms, that there is no evidence for the invariance of these stages, or claiming that the taxonomy is not based on any known theory of learning or teaching.

▪  The Bloom taxonomy presupposes that there is a necessary relationship between the questions asked and the responses to be elicited, whereas, in the SOLO taxonomy, both the questions and the answers can be at differing levels.

Whereas Bloom separates 'knowledge' from the intellectual abilities or processes that operate on this 'knowledge', the SOLO taxonomy is primarily based on the processes of understanding used by the students when answering the prompts.  Knowledge, therefore, permeates across all levels of the SOLO taxonomy.

▪  Bloom has argued that his taxonomy is related not only to complexity but also to an order of difficulty such that problems requiring behavior at one level should be answered more correctly before tackling problems requiring behavior at a higher level. Although there may be measurement advantages to this increasing difficulty, this is not a necessary requirement of the SOLO method. It is possible for an item at the relational level, for example, to be constructed so that it is less difficult than an item at the unstructured level. For example, an item aiming to elicit relational responses might be 'How does the movement of the Earth relative to the sun define day and night'. This may be easier (depending on instruction, etc.) than a unstructured item that asks 'What does celestial rotation mean?'

▪  Bloom’s taxonomy is not accompanied by criteria for judging the outcome of the activity (Ennis, 1985), whereas SOLO is explicitly useful for judging the outcomes. Take, for example, a series of art questions suggested by Hamben (1984).

Knowledge

Who painted Guernica?

Comprehension. 

Describe the subject matter of Guernica.
Application. 
Relate the theme of Guernica to a current event.

Analysis. 

What compositional principles did Picasso use in Guernica?

Synthesis. 

Imagine yourself as one of the figures in Guernica and describe your life history?

Evaluation. 

What is your opinion of Picasso’s Guernica?

When using Bloom’s taxonomy, the supposition is that the question leads to a particular type of Bloom response. There is no necessary relationship, however, as a student may respond with a very deep response to the supposedly lower-order question: 'Describe the subject matter of Guernica?' Similarly, a student may provide a very surface response to 'What is your opinion of Picasso’s Guernica'? When using the SOLO taxonomy, either the questions would be written differently, or the test scorer would concentrate on classifying the responses only. An example of re-writing to maximize the correspondence between the question asked and the answer expected is:

Unistructural. 

Who painted Guernica?

Multistructural. 

Outline at least two compositional principles that Picasso used in Guernica.

Relational. 

Relate the theme of Guernica to a current event.

Extended Abstract. 

What do you consider Picasso was saying via his painting of Guernica?

Advantages of the SOLO model for evaluation of student learning

▪  There are several advantages of the SOLO model over the Bloom taxonomy in the evaluation of student learning.

▪  These advantages concern not only item construction and scoring, but incorporate features of the process of evaluation that pay attention to how students learn, and how teachers devise instructional procedures to help students use progressively more complex cognitive processes.

▪  Unlike the Bloom taxonomy, which tends to be used more by teachers than by students, the SOLO can be taught to students such that they can learn to write 
progressively more difficult answers or prompts.

▪  There is a closer parallel between how teachers teach and how students learn.

▪  Both teachers and students often progress from more surface to deeper constructs and this is mirrored in the four levels of the SOLO taxonomy.

▪  There is no necessary progression in the manner of teaching or learning in the Bloom taxonomy.

▪  The levels can be interpreted relative to the proficiency of the students. Six-year-old students can be taught to derive general principles and suggest hypotheses, though obviously to a different level of abstraction and detail than their older peers. Using the SOLO method, it is relatively easy to construct items to assess such abstractions.

▪  The SOLO taxonomy not only suggests an item writing methodology, but the same taxonomy can be used to score the items. The marker assesses each response to establish either the number of ideas (one = unstructured; _ two = multi-structural) or the degree of interrelatedness (directly related or abstracted to more general principles). This can lead to more dependability of scoring.

▪  Unlike the experience of some with the Bloom taxonomy it is relatively easy to identify and categorise the SOLO levels.

▪  Similarly, teachers could be encouraged to use the 'plus one' principle when choosing appropriate learning material for students. That is, the teacher can aim to move the student one level higher in the taxonomy by appropriate choice of learning material and instructional sequencing


Related Topics 


Friday, September 4, 2020

Explain the cognitive domain of Bloom’s Taxonomy of education objective | Teacher Education | aiou solved assignment | Course Code 8602

    


Q 4:  a) Explain the cognitive domain of Bloom’s Taxonomy of education objective.

CourseEducational Assessment and Evaluation

Course code 8602

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 

Answer:


Cognitive Domain of Bloom’s Taxonomy

Bloom's Taxonomy was created in 1956 under the leadership of educational psychologist Dr Benjamin Bloom to promote higher forms of thinking in education, such as analyzing and evaluating concepts, processes, procedures, and principles, rather than just remembering facts (rote learning). It is most often used when designing educational, training,   and learning processes.




The Three Domains of Learning



The committee identified three domains of educational activities or learning (Bloom, et al. 1956):

  • Cognitive: mental skills (knowledge)
  • Affective: growth in feelings or emotional areas (attitude or self)
  • Psychomotor: manual or physical skills (skills)


Since the work was produced by higher education, the words tend to be a little bigger than we normally use.  Domains may be thought of as categories. 



Instructional designers, trainers, and educators often refer to these three categories as KSA (Knowledge [cognitive], Skills [psychomotor], and Attitudes [affective]). This taxonomy of learning behaviors may be thought of as “the goals of the learning process.” That is, after a learning episode, the learner should have acquired a new skill, knowledge, and/or attitude.  While the committee produced an elaborate compilation of the cognitive and affective domains, they omitted the psychomotor domain. Their explanation for this oversight was that they have little experience in teaching manual skills at the college level. However, there have been at least three psychomotor models created by other researchers.




Their compilation divides the three domains into subdivisions, starting from the simplest cognitive process or behavior to the most complex. The divisions outlined are not absolutes and some other systems or hierarchies have been devised, such as the Structure of Observed Learning Outcome (SOLO). However, Bloom's taxonomy is easily understood and is probably the most widely applied one in use today.




Cognitive Domain


The cognitive domain involves knowledge and the development of intellectual skills (Bloom, 1956). This includes the recall or recognition of specific facts, procedural patterns, and concepts that serve in the development of intellectual abilities and skills. There are six major categories of cognitive processes, starting from the simplest to the most complex (see the table below for an in-depth coverage of each category):

  • Knowledge
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation


The categories can be thought of as degrees of difficulty. That is, the first ones must normally be mastered before the next one can take place.



Bloom's Revised Taxonomy



Lorin Anderson, a former student  of Bloom, and David Krathwohl revisited the cognitive domain in the mid-nineties and made some changes, with perhaps the three most prominent ones being (Anderson, Krathwohl, Airasian, Cruikshank, Mayer, Pintrich, Raths, Wittrock, 2000):


  • changing the names in the six categories from noun to verb forms
  • rearranging them as shown in the chart below
  • creating a processes and levels of knowledge matrix

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