What is the highest level of commitment in the affective domain taxonomy, involving the coordination of experiences into a comprehensive value hierarchy?

Correct answer: Characterization by a value complex

Explanation

The affective domain taxonomy describes the development of attitudes, values, and commitments. The highest level, Characterization, represents the point where values are so deeply internalized and organized that they consistently guide a person's behavior.

Other questions

Question 1

What is the primary distinction between a curriculum framework and a curriculum guide?

Question 2

In the cognitive approach to formulating learning objectives, what are 'indicators'?

Question 3

According to Robert Mager's model, what are the three essential features of a well-written behavioral objective?

Question 4

In the original Bloom's Taxonomy, which level involves breaking information into its components to understand its structure?

Question 5

What is the key difference between the original Bloom's Taxonomy and the revised version by Anderson and Krathwohl?

Question 6

What is the primary characteristic of Tier 3 instruction within a Response to Intervention (RTI) framework?

Question 7

What is the defining feature of an emergent curriculum?

Question 8

Which of the following is NOT one of the five features of a fully effective multicultural education described in the text?

Question 9

What is meant by 'modeling as a demonstration' in the context of instructional planning?

Question 10

What is the primary purpose of guided practice in the learning process?

Question 11

What is the concept of 'vicarious reinforcement' as it relates to modeling?

Question 12

According to the text, why can activating a student's prior knowledge be a 'mixed blessing'?

Question 13

Which level of the affective domain taxonomy involves a willingness to simply attend to a particular experience or new knowledge?

Question 14

What is the key difference between an absolute grading system and a relative grading system?

Question 15

How many specific skills is the third-grade standard 'students speak and write with command of English conventions' broken into in the California curriculum framework example?

Question 16

In the revised Bloom's Taxonomy, 'recalling how to view a cell under a microscope' is an example of which type of knowledge?

Question 17

What is the primary goal of Response to Intervention (RTI)?

Question 18

What does the term 'equity pedagogy' refer to within multicultural education?

Question 19

What is a major limitation of using the internet as a learning tool, as discussed in the chapter?

Question 20

What is the primary purpose of 'service learning' as an instructional strategy?

Question 21

Which of the following scenarios best illustrates the instructional strategy of 'modeling as a simplified representation'?

Question 22

What are the two main purposes for which parents and teachers tend to favor homework, despite its controversies?

Question 23

What is the lowest level in the taxonomy of psychomotor objectives, as shown in Table 32?

Question 24

According to the chapter, what is the defining characteristic of a 'learning commons'?

Question 25

In the example of the cognitive approach to planning, which indicator is provided for the goal 'The student will understand the nature and purpose of photosynthesis'?

Question 26

What is the central idea of an 'emergent curriculum' as a planning approach?

Question 27

Which of these represents the highest level of cognitive processing in the revised Bloom's Taxonomy?

Question 28

In a Response to Intervention (RTI) model, which tier of instruction is provided to all students in the class?

Question 29

What is the process of 'curriculum webbing' used to facilitate?

Question 30

According to the text, what is a key intellectual benefit of service learning?

Question 31

What does the instructional technique 'activating prior knowledge' primarily involve?

Question 32

What is the two-fold task for teachers when anticipating student preconceptions?

Question 33

In the context of the compromise between cognitive and behavioral approaches to planning, what mistake is a teacher making with the objective 'Summarize the plot of each play to students'?

Question 34

In Bloom's original taxonomy, an objective asking students to 'Predict some of the things Goldilocks might have used if she had entered your house' falls into which level?

Question 35

What is the primary function of Tier 2 instruction in the RTI model?

Question 36

The knowledge construction process, as a feature of multicultural education, involves helping students to do what?

Question 37

Which example of a misconception about science is listed in Table 33?

Question 38

What is the difference between guided practice and independent practice?

Question 40

What is the primary distinction between a national standard and a state standard in the United States, according to the text?

Question 41

Which of the following describes the 'Application' level of Bloom's original taxonomy?

Question 42

What is the defining purpose of a 'curriculum guide'?

Question 43

The behavioral approach to instructional planning starts with which of the following?

Question 44

In the revised Bloom's Taxonomy, the new dimension added to the cognitive processes describes what?

Question 45

What is the key principle behind differentiated instruction?

Question 46

How many tiers of instruction are typically involved in a Response to Intervention (RTI) program?

Question 47

What is the primary moral benefit of service learning for students?

Question 48

The concept of instructional scaffolding, where a teacher provides a framework for a student to accomplish more than they could alone, is most similar to which practice?

Question 49

What is one of the main criticisms of the cognitive, general-to-specific approach to planning objectives?

Question 50

What is a major advantage of a checklist of objectives as a grade description system over a traditional letter grade system?