Secret #2: Bloom’s Taxonomy (or How Do Profs Write Exams, Anyway?)
Professors learn these reasons explicitly as part of their graduate training or implicitly through experience.
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How do profs write exams? Imagine if you knew that. What power you’d have. You could anticipate types of questions on an exam and you could bend a spoon just with the power of your mind. Well, maybe you wouldn't be able to do that bend-a-spoon thing.
I learned this secret explicitly as part of my graduate teacher training and I guess I use it consciously. At least that is what my syllabus says (see the teaching philosophy section of my syllabus).
I’d recommend you read:
How to Write Better Tests: A Handbook for Improving Test Construction Skills*
Now you know how an exam is written. You did visit and read that site above, right? You have a better understanding of the types of questions. But, what about the content of the questions? You know the how, but where’s the what?
* You may also want to check out Types of Question Based on Bloom's Taxonomy, Revised Bloom's Taxonomy and Bloom's Taxonomy.
(Source of figure above:http://www.odu.edu/educ/roverbau/Bloom/blooms_taxonomy.htm)
See: Secret 1 | Secret 2 | Secret 3
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