Thinking skills for CLIL
By Jean Brewster
Bloom's revised taxonomy of thinking skills
In 2001 a former student of Bloom, Lorin Anderson, published a revised classification of thinking skills which is actually rather similar to the original but focuses more on v erbs than nouns and renames some ofthe levels.
Higher order thinking skills
Creating
making, designing, constructing, planning, producing, inventing,
Evaluating
checking, hypothesizing, ex perimenting, judging, testing, monitoring,
Analyzing
comparing, organizing, outlining, finding, structuring, integrating
Applying
implementing, carrying out, using
Understanding
comparing, ex plaining, classifying, exemplifying, summarizing
Remembering
recognizing, listing, describing, identifying, retrieving, naming, finding, defining
Lower order thinking skills
We can see that these levels have an intuitive appeal to many teachers; howev er it can also be difficult to implement some of these ideas. For example, comparing falls both under analyzing and understanding,which is confusing. Here analyzing the level of comparison depends on context, for example: how complex is the concept or knowledge being compared?
En este artículo aparecen claves para trabajar en el aula (con la lengua específica asociada a las preguntas correspondientes a cada nivel) y como adaptarlas alos materiales que diseñamos para el ÁREA NO LINGÜÍSTICA.