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

Exercise

Active learning activities that promote student engagement and interaction, such as group discussions, hands-on experiments, case studies, and simulations, incorporated throughout the course outline to enhance student understanding and application of the subject matter.

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How to use the verb Exercise in a course or learning design

To incorporate the 'Exercise' verb from Blooms Taxonomy into your learning design, you can create activities where learners practice and apply the concepts they've learned. One simple and actionable step is to design exercises that require learners to describe a repetitive task to practice their understanding. First, identify key concepts or skills that require practice. Then, create scenarios or problems where learners must describe the steps involved in performing a repetitive task related to those concepts. This could be done through written responses, discussions, role-plays, or simulations. Ensure that the exercises are varied to cater to different learning preferences and levels of complexity. Encourage self-assessment and provide feedback to further enhance learning outcomes. By incorporating exercises with the question stem 'Describe a repetitive task for practising', you can actively engage learners in applying knowledge, developing skills, and fostering deeper understanding of the subject matter. This approach not only reinforces learning but also promotes retention and mastery. Exercise, Blooms Taxonomy, learning design, practice, describe a repetitive task.

Want to use
Exercise
in your next learning design?

We help you structure learning activities, align with learning outcomes and collaborate with subject experts to create learning experiences in any format and for any platform.

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Example of the learning verb Exercise in a prompt learning

Describe a repetitive task for practising

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Example of the verb Exercise in a task for learners

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