The document discusses Bloom's taxonomy, a framework for categorizing levels of thinking skills. It outlines the six main cognitive levels from lowest to highest order: recall, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. For each level, examples are provided of associated thinking skills and question verbs. Recall involves remembering or recalling facts, terms, basic concepts, and answers given explicitly. Comprehension demonstrates understanding of meanings through activities like translating, interpreting, and summarizing. Application involves using learned information in new ways to solve problems or complete tasks. Analysis breaks down information into parts to understand its overall structure and organization. Synthesis combines different elements into a new whole, such as formulating a hypothesis. Evaluation makes judgments based on criteria
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