Is Bloom's taxonomy appropriate for computer science?
CG Johnson, U Fuller - Proceedings of the 6th Baltic Sea conference on …, 2006 - dl.acm.org
CG Johnson, U Fuller
Proceedings of the 6th Baltic Sea conference on Computing education research …, 2006•dl.acm.orgBloom's taxonomy attempts to provide a set of levels of cognitive engagement with material
being learned. It is usually presented as a generic framework. In this paper we outline some
studies which examine whether the taxonomy is appropriate for computing, and how its
application in computing might differ from its application elsewhere. We place this in the
context of ongoing debates concerning graduateness and attempts to'benchmark'the content
of a computing degree.
being learned. It is usually presented as a generic framework. In this paper we outline some
studies which examine whether the taxonomy is appropriate for computing, and how its
application in computing might differ from its application elsewhere. We place this in the
context of ongoing debates concerning graduateness and attempts to'benchmark'the content
of a computing degree.
Bloom's taxonomy attempts to provide a set of levels of cognitive engagement with material being learned. It is usually presented as a generic framework. In this paper we outline some studies which examine whether the taxonomy is appropriate for computing, and how its application in computing might differ from its application elsewhere. We place this in the context of ongoing debates concerning graduateness and attempts to 'benchmark' the content of a computing degree.
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