psychomotor
Adaption
Rearrange
psychomotor
Adaption
Reorganise
psychomotor
Adaption
Revise
psychomotor
Adaption
Vary
psychomotor
Expertise
Assemble
psychomotor
Expertise
Calibrate
psychomotor
Expertise
Construct
psychomotor
Expertise
Dismantle
psychomotor
Expertise
Display
psychomotor
Expertise
Fasten
psychomotor
Expertise
Fix
psychomotor
Expertise
Grind
psychomotor
Expertise
Heat
psychomotor
Expertise
Manipulate
psychomotor
Expertise
Measure
psychomotor
Expertise
Mend
psychomotor
Expertise
Mix
psychomotor
Expertise
Organise
psychomotor
Expertise
Sketch
psychomotor
Guided
Copy
psychomotor
Guided
Follow
psychomotor
Guided
React
psychomotor
Guided
Reproduce
psychomotor
Guided
Respond
psychomotor
Guided
Trace

Serve

The serve verb involves actively contributing to the welfare or support of others.

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How to use in a learning design

To incorporate 'Serve' within the affective domain of Bloom's Taxonomy in your learning design, you can encourage learners to demonstrate their professional commitment towards a specific topic or skill. Use the question stem "Show your professional commitment towards" followed by the focus area. For example, you can design a scenario where learners are tasked with volunteering their skills to help a community in need, showing their dedication and empathy towards serving others. This task can help them internalize the values of compassion and social responsibility within their professional practice. To implement this in your next design, follow these steps: 1. Identify the key area or values you want learners to demonstrate their commitment towards. 2. Frame the question stem using "Show your professional commitment towards ..." followed by the focus area. 3. Provide a scenario or task where learners can actively engage in serving others or showcasing their dedication. 4. Encourage reflection on the experience and the impact of their actions on others. By using 'Serve' in this way, you can deepen learners' emotional engagement with the subject matter and foster a sense of social responsibility Keywords: Bloom's Taxonomy, affective domain, professional commitment, empathy, social responsibility, learning design, values, emotional engagement, compassion.

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Question stem

Show your professional commitment towards

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Example

The educator plans a teaching activity where adult learners serve as mentors to teenage students, guiding them through career exploration and offering advice and support.

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