Information on the common core & essential standards initiative in elkin city schools
mission statement
The Common Core State Standards provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them. The standards are designed to be robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our young people need for success in college and careers. With American students fully prepared for the future, our communities will be best positioned to compete successfully in the global economy.
bloom's revised taxonomy
The New Essential Standards are written using the Revised Bloom's Taxonomy (RBT) under the guidance of one of the authors of the revision, Lorin Anderson. North Carolina has chosen RBT to help move to the complex thinking expected from 21st Century graduates. The RBT was chosen because it has well-defined verbs and is built on modern cognitive research. Below is a very short primer on the RBT. Webinars, tools and resources for understanding and using the RBT will be made available throughout the winter and spring.
The RBT categorizes both the cognitive process and the knowledge dimension of the standard.
Cognitive Process:
The cognitive process refers to the verb used in the standard. This chart (pdf, 76kb) shows the verbs used in the RBT. The RBT has specific definitions for all the verbs used in the taxonomy.
For example:
A common understanding of those verbs will be at the backbone of professional development around the new standards.
Knowledge Dimension:
The knowledge dimension is a way to categorize the type of knowledge to be learned. For instance, in the standard "The student will understand the concept of equality as it applies to solving problems with unknown quantities", the knowledge to be learned is "the concept of equality as it applies to solving problems with unknown
quantities."
Knowledge in the RBT falls into four categories:
RBT Knowledge Chart
More detail on the sub-types of knowledge. (pdf, 86kb)
Standards can be charted based on the cognitive process and knowledge dimension using a chart (pdf, 83kb). It is also important to note that although RBT standards focus on particular verbs, "most authentic tasks require the coordinated use of several cognitive processes as well as several types of knowledge." (Anderson, Lorin and David Krathwohl, A Taxonomy For Learning, Teaching and Assessing. New York: Longman, 2001. Pg. 89)
The RBT categorizes both the cognitive process and the knowledge dimension of the standard.
Cognitive Process:
The cognitive process refers to the verb used in the standard. This chart (pdf, 76kb) shows the verbs used in the RBT. The RBT has specific definitions for all the verbs used in the taxonomy.
For example:
- Explaining requires constructing a
cause-and-effect model of a system (e.g. explain the recent downturn in the
global economy) - Inferring requires drawing a logical conclusion
from presented information (e.g. In learning a foreign language, infer
grammatical principles from examples)
A common understanding of those verbs will be at the backbone of professional development around the new standards.
Knowledge Dimension:
The knowledge dimension is a way to categorize the type of knowledge to be learned. For instance, in the standard "The student will understand the concept of equality as it applies to solving problems with unknown quantities", the knowledge to be learned is "the concept of equality as it applies to solving problems with unknown
quantities."
Knowledge in the RBT falls into four categories:
- Factual Knowledge
- Conceptual Knowledge
- Procedural Knowledge
- Meta-Cognitive Knowledge
RBT Knowledge Chart
More detail on the sub-types of knowledge. (pdf, 86kb)
Standards can be charted based on the cognitive process and knowledge dimension using a chart (pdf, 83kb). It is also important to note that although RBT standards focus on particular verbs, "most authentic tasks require the coordinated use of several cognitive processes as well as several types of knowledge." (Anderson, Lorin and David Krathwohl, A Taxonomy For Learning, Teaching and Assessing. New York: Longman, 2001. Pg. 89)