In days gone by, rote learning was where it was at.

Latin? Learn your grammar off by heart.

Mathematics? Learn your times tables until the answer to 12 times 9 is nothing more than a reflex-like that reflex-thing when the doctor hits your knee with a tiny hammer.

Now, there’s no doubt about it, rote learning has its place. If you want to commit important dates to memory, then rote learning is one truly effective method.

But, what if you want to do more than commit facts and figures to memory? What if the question isn’t when did the First World War start, but, instead, why did the First World War start?

Questions like these require us to think in a different way than those questions that can be answered by simply regurgitating information we have committed to memory.

When questions demand of us that we engage creatively, respond innovatively, or to evaluate, then we need to engage in higher-order thinking.

When we talk about higher-order thinking we are referring to thinking skills that go beyond the mere memorization of facts and figures. This type of thinking makes more demands on our cognitive processing capabilities than other types of thinking.

Higher order thinking skills questions with answers

Higher-order thinking skills are much more difficult to teach than the lower order skills, but they are all the more important for that.

Aside from the fact that questions that make demands of students’ higher-order thinking skills are weighted more heavily in exams, there are several reasons why students need to learn and practice them in the classroom.

Higher order thinking:

  • Enables a greater appreciation of art and literature, enriching our enjoyment and experience of life

  • Promotes essential skills such as critical thinking and problem-solving

  • Are highly in demand by employers and projected to be increasingly in demand in the future

  • Involves transferable skills that can be essential in a wide variety of contexts.

How Do I Teach Higher Order Thinking In My Classroom?

As we’ve mentioned already, higher order thinking makes greater cognitive processing demands and this type of thinking can be, unsurprisingly, more difficult to both learn and teach.

In the strategies below, you’ll find a mix of concepts and activities that can be combined and adapted to help encourage higher order thinking in your classroom.

The Relevance of Bloom’s Taxonomy

One of the keys here lies in asking questions that require students to engage in higher order thinking in order to answer them.

The types of questions that demand higher order thinking of our students can helpfully be illustrated with reference to Bloom’s taxonomy.

In this well-known classification system and hierarchical organization of thinking types, the lower order thinking types such as Remember, Understand, and Apply require less cognitive processing than the higher order types such as Analyze, Evaluate, and Create.

Bloom’s taxonomy classifies learning objectives by complexity and is therefore a helpful means to identify higher order questions.

According to Bloom’s, there are 6 levels of learning objectives: remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, and create.

The first 3 of these are considered to employ lower level thinking, while the last 3 are classified as higher order thinking.

If we are composing questions for our students that challenge students at levels 4, 5, and 6 (analyze, evaluate, create), then our students will need to engage in higher order thinking to answer.

Now, let’s take a look at how we can use each of the 3 higher levels in Bloom’s taxonomy to generate questions that will encourage higher order thinking in our students.

Higher Order Thinking Questions 

We’ll take a look at each of the 3 higher order levels in turn.

First, we’ll briefly define each of the terms. Then, we’ll list some of the keywords that can be used to form instructions for a higher order thinking task. And, finally, we’ll offer some useful question starters, or prompts, to encourage higher order thinking at this level.

1. Analyze - Exploring connections and relationships by breaking things into parts

Keywords: Analyze, Categorize, Classify, Compare, Contrast, Discover, Divide, Examine, Group, Inspect, Sequence, Simplify.

Question Starters:

  • Why did x happen?

  • What is the relationship between x and y?

  • What were the advantages of x?

  • What were the disadvantages of x?

  • What was the turning point?

  • What were the causes of x?

  • What were the effects of x?

2. Evaluate - Defending or justifying our opinions and beliefs

Keywords: Assess, Choose, Determine, Evaluate, Justify, Compare, Rate, Recommend, Select, Agree, Appraise, Prioritize, Support, Prove, Disprove.