Bloom’s Taxonomy in the latest ICSE and ISC syllabus

A practical, student-friendly guide inspired by official specimen papers.

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What is Bloom’s Taxonomy and why it matters now?

The idea in one line:

Bloom’s Taxonomy is a ladder of thinking skills that climbs from simple recall to original creation. The six rungs are Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analysing, Evaluating, Creating.

For Teachers

Teachers use it to set learning goals and design questions that go beyond rote learning.

For Students

Students use it to read a question, spot the thinking skill it demands, and answer in the right style for full credit.

Why it matters for ICSE and ISC:

The Council’s recent specimen papers and marking schemes highlight the cognitive skill behind each question. That means you will see more verbs like explain, compare, justify and design, and you are expected to demonstrate the exact skill asked. For example, the ICSE 2025 Literature in English specimen shows the Board’s taxonomy cues alongside tasks so teachers and students can align preparation with the intended skill.

The Six Levels Explained

Each level below includes a simple definition, common alternate names, three ICSE or ISC subject examples, and a sample prompt you might see in exams.

Remembering

Knowledge, Recall

Recall facts, terms, definitions or steps.

English Literature:

List two images used in the stanza.

Physics:

State Ohm’s law.

History:

Name the Viceroy during the Partition of Bengal.

Exam-style prompt:

“Identify the figure of speech in line 3.” or “State the SI unit of resistance.”

Understanding

Comprehension, Interpret

Show that you grasp meaning by explaining or summarising.

English Literature:

Explain how the setting creates mood in the extract.

Physics:

Describe why current decreases when resistance increases.

History:

Summarise two aims of the Non-Cooperation Movement.

Exam-style prompt:

“Explain why the poet uses a first-person narrator here.”

Applying

Application, Use.

Use a concept, formula or rule in a new situation.

English Literature:

Use context to infer the meaning of a word, then justify your inference.

Physics:

A 6 V battery produces a current of 0.5 A. Calculate the resistance.

History:

Apply cause-effect logic to link an event to a policy outcome.

Exam-style prompt:

“Using the relation V = IR, find R when V = 6 V and I = 0.5 A.”

Analysing

Analysis, Compare, Contrast, Differentiate.

Break information into parts and examine relationships or patterns.

English Literature:

Analyse how imagery and contrast create irony.

Physics:

Compare series and parallel circuits with respect to current and potential difference.

History:

Distinguish between the methods of Moderates and Extremists in the early national movement.

Exam-style prompt:

“Compare the portrayal of the two characters, showing how dialogue reveals their motives.”

Evaluating

Judge, Appraise, Critique, Justify.

Judge value or effectiveness using criteria and evidence.

English Literature:

Evaluate whether the speaker is reliable, using textual evidence.

Physics:

Assess the reliability of an experiment and suggest how to reduce error.

History:

To what extent was the Civil Disobedience Movement successful. Give reasons.

Exam-style prompt:

“Do you agree with the view that the policy was effective. Justify your answer with two reasons.”

Creating

Synthesis, Design, Construct, Develop.

Combine ideas to produce a new plan, product or interpretation.

English Literature:

Write an alternative ending that preserves the theme and tone.

Physics:

Design an investigation to verify how the length of a wire affects resistance.

History:

Propose a brief to address a historical problem using period-appropriate constraints.

Exam-style prompt:

“Design an experiment to determine the focal length of a convex lens. Include apparatus, procedure and safety.”

Quick Reference Guide

Spot question types and match your response in seconds

Spot the Question Type

Remembering:

Define, list, name, label, state, identify

Understanding:

Explain, describe, interpret, summarise, give reasons

Applying:

Apply, use, calculate, demonstrate, show how, solve

Analysing:

Analyse, compare, contrast, differentiate, examine

Evaluating:

Evaluate, justify, argue, assess, to what extent, critique

Creating:

Design, propose, plan, construct, develop, compose

Answer Structures

Remembering:

Accurate terms, correct spellings, exact units, no extra story.

Understanding:

Clear explanation in your own words with a short example.

Applying:

Correct rule or formula, proper substitution, steps shown, correct units.

Analysing:

Structured comparison or breakdown, evidence linked to each point.

Evaluating:

Criteria first, balanced argument, supported judgement.

Creating:

Feasible plan or original response that fits the syllabus and the prompt.

Answer like a Topper:

Structures that match each cognitive level in Bloom’s Taxonomy for ICSE and ISC success

Remembering

Structure

Short bullet points.

  • Model: Term or fact on a new line, followed by unit if relevant.
  • Score saver: Do not explain when the verb is state or list.

Example

Question: State Ohm’s law

• V = IR

• Voltage is directly proportional to current

• Unit: Volts (V)

Understanding

Structure

PEE slice – Point, Explanation, Example.

  • Model: State the idea, explain it in simple words, add one data point or quotation.

Example

Question: Explain why current decreases when resistance increases

Point: Current and resistance are inversely proportional

Explanation: According to Ohm’s law (V=IR), when voltage is constant, increasing resistance reduces current flow

Example: In a 12V circuit, doubling resistance from 2Ω to 4Ω halves current from 6A to 3A

Analysing

Structure

For science: Formula → Substitution → Working → Final answer with unit

For humanities: Rule or concept → Apply to the given case → One tight inference

  • Score saver: Box the final value and include the unit

Example

Question: A 6V battery produces current of 0.5A. Calculate resistance.

Formula: V = IR, therefore R = V/I

Substitution: R = 6V / 0.5A

Working: R = 12

R = 12Ω

Evaluating

Structure

PEEL paragraph or a two-column compare-contrast table

• Point

• Evidence or quotation or data

• Explanation of the relationship or pattern

• Link back to the question

  • Score saver: Headings like Similarities, Differences, Causes, Effects keep you focused.

Example

Question: Compare series and parallel circuits

Series Circuits
• Same current throughout

• Voltage divides across components

• One path for current

Parallel Circuits
• Same voltage across branches

• Current divides between paths

• Multiple paths for current

Creating

Structure

Criteria → Evidence for and against → Verdict.

  • Phrases that help: On balance, A stronger case is made by, The limitations are.

  • Score saver: Answer the command term to what extent with a clear final judgement.

Example

Question: To what extent was the Civil Disobedience Movement successful?

Criteria: Mass participation, policy changes, long-term impact

Evidence for: Widespread participation, salt tax reduced, international attention

Evidence against: Limited constitutional gains, communal tensions increased

Verdict: On balance, moderately successful in raising awareness but limited in immediate political gains

Applying

Structure

Purpose → Materials or sources → Method or outline → Expected outcome → Limitations or safety.

Score saver: Keep it practical and syllabus-friendly.

Example

Question: Design an experiment to verify focal length of a convex lens

Purpose: To determine focal length using object-image relationship

Materials: Convex lens, optical bench, candle, screen, metre rule

Method: Place object at known distances, measure image distance, calculate using 1/f = 1/u + 1/v

Expected outcome: Consistent focal length value from multiple readings

Safety: Handle lens carefully, ensure adequate lighting

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