You are on page 1of 29

How to Apply Bloom's

Taxonomy in Teaching?
GREEN
Presented by: Trisha Mae Rivera
Charlene Collado
01 Remembering

Revised 02 Understanding

Bloom’s 03 Applying

04
Taxonomy
Analyzing

05 Evaluating
2

06 Creating
01
REMEMBERING
TENSES OF THE VERB

There are three (3) main verb


tenses in English
3 Main verb tenses in English

PRESENT TENSE PAST TENSE FUTURE TENSE

-refers to action that -refers to actions -refers to action


is taking place at the that happened at a that will take place
present time. definite time in the in the future.
past.
For example: I am a For example: I will
teacher For example: I be a teacher
washed the dishes someday.
earlier.
Difference between Regular and Irregular Verbs

● Regular verbs are verbs that form their simple past and past participle by adding the
suffix "-d, ed, or ied"

For example: walk - walked - walked


smile - smiled - smiled
fry - fried -fried

● Irregular verbs are a type of strong verb that has some special rules for forming the
past tense.
● So, these verbs do not end with -d, -ed, or -ied; rather, they change to an entirely
different word.

For example: know - knew - known


drink - drank - drunk
eat - ate - eaten
I saw rocks.
7
What do you think? Does it happen in the present,
past, or future?
02
UNDERSTANDING
Do you know that there are different types of past tense?

Past tense has four different forms: Simple Past Tense,


Past Continuous Tense, Past Perfect Tense, and Past
Perfect Continuous Tense
Simple Past- is the basic form of past tense in English. It is used to indicate an
action or event that happened in the past.

Example: “I baked cookies last night” Example: "I saw rocks"


The verb “baked” is a regular verb. The verb "saw" is an irregular verb.

BAKE - BAKED - BAKED SEE - SAW - SEEN

● "Bake" is the base form ● "See" is the base form


● "Baked” is the simple past ● "Saw” is the simple past
● "Baked" is the past participle ● "Seen" is the past participle
03
APPLYING
Now that we've learned how to form a sentence in a
simple past, can you create one on your own?

I will give an example again:


- I cleaned the house yesterday.
- I ate cake yesterday.
04
ANALYZING
Each tense contains four parts that discuss the completion of
the event or action, and we have four sorts of past tense verbs
based on that:Simple Past Tense, Past Continuous Tense, Past
Perfect Tense, and Past Perfect Continuous Tense.
14
PAST CONTINUOUS TENSE PAST PERFECT TENSE PAST PERFECT CONTINUOUS

Past continuous tense is used Past perfect is a verb tense This tense is used to
to indicate an ongoing event used to talk about actions that describe actions that were
in the past. were completed before some going on in the past up until
point in the past. another action in the past
happened.
Example: I was calling him
when he came home.
Example: I had been (I'd been) Example: I had been
studying English very long.
05
EVALUATING
FILL IN THE BLANKS

1. You _________ my window’s glass. (break)


BROKE

You broke my window’s glass. (break)


2. I _____ something near that place. (see)
SAW

I saw something near that place. (see)


3. He _____ from London some time ago. (come)
CAME

He came from London some time ago. (come)


4. Our soldiers _____ the battle. (win)
WON

Our soldiers won the battle. (win)


5. She ______ an iPhone. (buy)
BOUGHT

She bought an iPhone. (buy)


06 CREATE!

CREATING
Write an essay with pictures or drawings
about your most recent vacation utilizing what
you have learnt about simple past tense.
Consider what happened to your previous
vacations.
Thank you for listening!

BYE!
PRESENTED BY:

TRISHA MAE RIVERA


CHARLENE COLLADO

You might also like