Some examples of synthesis questions include … “How would you assemble these items to create a windmill?” “How would your life be different if you could breathe under water?” “Construct a tower one foot tall using only four blocks.”
- What is synthesis in Bloom's taxonomy?
- What are the six levels of Bloom's taxonomy with examples?
- What are understanding based questions?
- What is an application based question?
What is synthesis in Bloom's taxonomy?
Synthesis- Synthesis refers to the ability to put parts together to form a new whole. This may involve the production of a unique communication (theme or speech), a plan of operations (research proposal), or a set of abstract relations (scheme for classifying information).
What are the six levels of Bloom's taxonomy with examples?
These six levels are: (1) knowledge, (2) comprehension, (3) application, (4) analysis, (5) synthesis, and (6) evaluation (see Fig. 1). Bloom's taxonomy provides a systematic way of describing how a learner's per- formance grows in complexity when mastering academic tasks.
What are understanding based questions?
Comprehension (Understanding)
These questions test the students' ability to summarize and describe in their own words without necessarily relating it to anything.
What is an application based question?
Application-based questions test a candidate's ability to apply knowledge and concepts (for example, to determine, analyse, establish, predict, solve) in practical work situations.