TY - JOUR AU - Kumpanat, Tipkeson AU - Koonchayanggoon, Suntanee AU - Punchaariyakun, Sirinnicha AU - Pinthana, Phraisin AU - Kasakij, Saengjan PY - 2020/12/09 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Cognitive Learning Behavior Based on the Concept of Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy JF - Journal of Graduate Research JA - J.Grad Res VL - 11 IS - 2 SE - Academic Article DO - UR - https://so02.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/banditvijai/article/view/242749 SP - 1-10 AB - <p>Cognitive domain contains learning skills predominantly related to the mental skills and the acquisition of knowledge of an individual, such as memorizing, understanding of stories or things, solving problems and thinking creatively, which is a definitive sign of a person’s intelligence. Teachers should therefore devote much attention to learning management that emphasizes the development of cognition at higher order thinking because it will enable them to learn effectively and acquire practical skills. The revised version of cognitive domain has two dimensions. The first dimension is knowledge dimension which is composed of four aspects: factual knowledge, conceptual knowledge, procedural knowledge and metacognitive knowledge. The second dimension is cognitive process dimension which is composed of six levels: remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating. If teachers have an intimate knowledge and thorough understanding of the particular learning behaviors of each level in Bloom’s hierarchy, they will be able to deliver effective lessons that focus on leaners’ cognitive development from surface learning to deep learning, which could be optimally advantageous to learners. Those effective lessons will enable them to develop their critical and thinking skills, with a focus on constructing new knowledge that would lead them to become competent learners.</p> ER -