Social Domain
These are the skills that are concerned with communicating, relating with others, living in society, managing, and leading. Each PROCESS consists of multiple clusters. Simply click any process to open its clusters. Each
clusterconsists of multiple SKILLS. Simply click any cluster to view its skills.
Process 1 Communicating (producing and receiving messages)
Receiving a Message (using techniques to process a transmission of information)
- Active listening: maintaining attention on what is being said with interaction
- Rephrasing: restating—illustrating what was heard by honoring and then enhancing the message
- Reading body language: gathering information from non-verbal signs
- Gaining perspective: adopting new points of view based on the message
- Being perceptive: being attuned to what is happening during communication
- Identifying key ideas: determining the important components of the message
Preparing a Message (structuring the information for a given audience)
- Defining thesis: specifying central theme for a message
- Knowing the audience: understanding the background and interests of receivers
- Articulating an idea: distilling the essence of the message
- Building credibility: generating trust that the message is true
- Structuring a message: sequencing elements for the desired impact
- Phrasing: using words and expressions suitable for the audience or context
- Choosing medium: selecting the means or channel of communication
Delivering a Message (maximizing the value of the communication)
- Timing delivery: picking the right time and place to present a message
- Explaining: clarifying the message with specifics to increase understanding
- Illustrating: enhancing a message with images, props, drawings or body language
- Storytelling: affirming or informing with an anecdote
- Exposing vulnerability: being willing to speak publicly
Writing a Message (using techniques to enhance textual communication)
- Documenting: capturing the details of something (a solution, a discussion, an incident, etc.)
- Writing to think: exploring meaning through expressing what comes to mind
- Using correct grammar: forming sentence structure using established syntax
- Writing critically: analyzing evidence from diverse sources to build reasoned arguments
- Writing technically: using applied or professional language to communicate specialized knowledge
- Writing formally: following specific conventions and formatting standards
Orating (applying verbal skills in delivering a formal speech)
- Generating presence: delivering a message in a way that impresses or entertains an audience
- Being dynamic: using rhetorical devices or vocal strategies
- Engaging dialectically:: using discourse to exchange logical arguments in a search for truth
- Responding to an audience: dynamically changing communication tactics based on how others are reacting
- Appealing to emotions: persuading an audience by intentionally triggering feelings
Communicating Informally, Orally (applying communication skills to engage with others)
- Checking perception: testing to see if what you think is happening is happening
- Speaking to think: exploring meaning by talking about what comes to mind
- Opining: speaking from one’s perspective, value or beliefs
- Conversing: engaging others while exchanging information
- Influencing: intentionally affecting an audience’s belief or frame of reference
- Discussing: arguing for a specific point of view through the exchange of information
Process 2 Relating with Others (engaging effectively with people)
Relating Informally (connecting with others in a casual manner)
- Greeting others: initiating welcoming interactions with people
- Being personable: having a congenial manner with diverse people
- Being courteous: following conventions of politeness
- Using body language: projecting messages with the gestures, stance, and expressions
- Taking interest in others: initiating inquiry about another to show they are important
Relating Formally (connecting with others in an official context)
- Hosting: staging an event that welcomes, includes, and produces enjoyment
- Being respectful: showing regard and consideration
- Accommodating: taking the needs of others into consideration
- Seeking mentoring: asking for guidance/support from an expert to grow performance
Relating Meaningfully (deepening relationships with others)
- Befriending: initiating a supportive relationship
- Trusting: having faith or belief in another
- Committing to others: assuring that one will provide aid and support as promised
- Boosting someone’s confidence:: helping another appreciate that they are better than they seem to think
- Collaborating: working together for mutual benefit
- Compromising: negotiating to achieve common ground
- Comforting: attending to uplift others’ physical or mental state
- Showing gratitude: letting others know how much you value them
Performing in a Team (working together to achieve common goals)
- Performing in a role: fulfilling requirements of a particular position
- Cooperating: acting jointly to achieve goals
- Supporting the team: upholding collective performance
- Achieving consensus: agreeing on decisions based on shared input
- Challenging groupthink: Stopping team when self-reinforcing shuts out alternative ideas
- Resolving conflicts: finding common ground to move past disagreements
Process 3 Living in Society (dealing with all dimensions of social systems)
Being a Citizen (participating in civic processes)
- Accepting civic responsibility: performing roles supporting governance
- Obeying laws: complying with legal requirements
- Politicking: actively influencing decision-makers and stakeholders
- Supporting institutions: contributing respectfully to communities and organizations
Living in a Community (being a member of a group by adhering to common expectations)
- Recognizing conventions: behaving within the unwritten rules/social norms
- Gaining acceptance: interacting to discover like-minded people and groups
- Networking: interacting/forming strategic relationships
- Giving back: finding meaningful ways of bettering the status quo
- Volunteering: giving altruistically for the greater good
Performing in an Institution (thinking and comporting oneself within an organization)
- Being professional: meeting expectations within one’s organization
- Being assertive: projecting self-assurance and self-confidence
- Negotiating: pursuing advantageous agreements
- Using resources: sizing up and using available tools, information, people and system
- Being principled: applying or standing by your values, convictions, and beliefs in the face of adversity
Being a Family Member (managing day-to-day interactions with immediate relatives)
- Respecting parents: valuing your parents for their role in your life
- Nurturing: warmly and respectfully guiding the development of family (and community) members
- Putting family first: giving priority to the needs of relatives (parents, siblings, children, etc.)
Performing in a Culture (demonstrating competence in diverse societies, ethnic groups and communities)
- Analyzing a culture: determining the key societal differences
- Honoring traditions: observing/revering societal customs
- Being socially adept: reacting skillfully to changing cultural norms
- Appreciating folklore: understanding and welcoming the traditional beliefs, myths, tales, and practices of a group
Mentoring (Facilitating the growth of others through a formal relationship)
- Believing in someone: transparently providing substance so they believe in what they can become
- Advising: helping a person discover their best possibilities for improvement and success
- Challenging: proposing the raising of standards for others
- Advocating: pro-actively providing support for someone with hardship or opportunity
Living in the World (existing in a global society)
- Integrating history: assimilating/incorporating past events into current situations
- Seeking social justice: working towards a fair distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges
- Supporting sustainability: safeguarding future viability through present actions
- Acting globally: being guided locally by awareness of interdependency with the world community
Process 4 Managing (leveraging people, resources, and time to accomplish specific outcomes)
Managing Individuals (setting people up for successful performance)
- Acquiring personnel: selecting qualified personnel for specific functions
- Motivating: stimulating someone’s interest or enthusiasm to do something
- Assigning tasks: matching duties to performer skills and time
- Supporting needs: identifying and effectively responding to observed lack of resources
Managing Teams (setting groups up for successful performance)
- Building teams: forming groups by identifying the characteristics, functionality, and resources for success
- Assigning roles: aligning/matching positions or duties to member skills
- Sharing authority: agreeing on how to manage selected tasks
- Mediating: engaging with disputants to facilitate resolution of conflicts
Managing Human Systems (ensuring effective organization performance)
- Designing an evaluation system: creating performance standards and measures
- Recognizing strong performance: publicly distinguishing excellence
- Increasing productivity: increasing quality and quantity while also decreasing costs
- Providing Professional Development: identifying growth needs and sources for supporting it
Managing Resources (planning, providing, and monitoring assets and capital)
- Identifying essential resources: recognizing appropriate funding, scheduling and staffing
- Being financially astute: understanding key fiscal parameters
- Budgeting: planning for and managing resources
- Using information technology: taking advantage of data management tools
Managing Communications (overseeing internal and external information flow)
- Staying informed: intentionally acquiring information for decision making
- Marketing: initiating messages to persuade clients of the value of something
- Informing stakeholders: communicating with key individuals at appropriate times
- Being diplomatic: responding to divergent stakeholders’ needs without damaging relationships
- Systematizing communications: building and utilizing social networks for sharing information
Managing Projects (overseeing the development of end results or products)
- Chartering: proposing and gaining support prior to project design
- Initiating: ensuring start of a project
- Monitoring: periodically reviewing established milestones
- Generating results: producing useful or successful outcomes
- Meeting deadlines: making sure that critical milestones are met in timely manner
Facilitating group process (helping others achieve a set of outcomes)
- Developing connectedness: developing the shared experiences as agency
- Building cohesiveness: evolving solidarity in your community
- Creating a growth culture: Building an environment for increasing individuals’ capabilities
- Running a meeting: making sure that collective interests are efficiently served
Process 5 Leadership (accomplishing a mission by guiding others)
Envisioning (projecting a path to an end state)
- Forecasting: visualizing future status based on trends and logic
- Perceiving implications: describing the operational social impacts of future trends
- Balancing perspectives: avoiding tunnel vision by considering different points of view
Building a Following (establishing a group who will bring a vision to fruition)
- Sharing a vision: using empathy and imagery to help others see a future state
- Involving stakeholders: inviting key individuals to share perspectives and participate in significant activities
- Inspiring: motivating and encouraging others
- Demonstrating integrity: responding to issues with clear and consistent principles
Establishing Culture (creating an environment that supports a vision)
- Forming shared values: developing consensus on important principles
- Obtaining commitment: securing willingness to tackle challenges required for a vision
- Maintaining transparency: ensuring open access to information, data, and strategies
Maintaining a Commitment (helping the continuance of group dedication in order to achieve the vision)
- Taking meaningful stands: publicly embracing positions based on principles
- Being charismatic: displaying a confident flair and presence that motivates others
- Being accessible: being readily available to others
- Garnering resources: obtaining resources needed for implementing the vision
Facilitating Change Process (Leading a community/institution in a new growth area)
- Thinking opportunistically: using positive strategies to optimize advantage
- Responding to change: being flexible in strategic thinking
- Preparing for change: facilitating training needed for readiness
- Leading change process: effectively modeling, advocating, supporting and transforming a culture
- Sustaining change: taking actions that ensure the ongoing engagement of stakeholders
Empowering (inspiring and allowing others to carry out the vision)
- Grooming future leaders: mentoring and promoting a diverse and talented team
- Encouraging ownership: engaging others to accept a stake in the vision
- Practicing servant leadership: using the power of ones influence to enhance the well-being of others
- Preparing succession: ensuring that future leaders have a viable path forward
Affective Domain
These are the skills that have to do with emotion, processing emotions, and acting as a result of that processing. Each Process consists of multiple clusters. Simply click any process to open its clusters. Each cluster consists of multiple SKILLS. Simply click any cluster to view its skills.
Process 1 Engaging Emotionally (increasing affective capacities)
Observing Self (attending to present emotions)
- Listening to self: tracking the focus of your inner voice
- Perceiving emotions: recognizing and identifying your own affective responses
- Discovering motives: determining the trigger that induces a selected act
- Valuing the emotion: understanding the power of an affective response
Checking Emotions (changing your reactions to emotions)
- Noticing outlier reactions: discerning when the emotions of both yourself and others seem extreme for the context
- Controlling judgmental self-talk: confronting and changing negative inner messages
- Calming: soothing yourself
- Energizing: invigorating or rousing yourself, especially from boredom or lethargy
- Inhibiting impulses: consciously restraining sudden urges
Expanding Emotions (establishing affective connections to life)
- Finding humor: being amused by new sources of delight
- Trusting: expanding the ability to recognize authentic expressions of support
- Being loyal: showing allegiance to those you trust
- Responding to loss: adjusting to ongoing feelings related to disappointments and grief
- Risking disapproval: willingness to put yourself in contexts where others may judge you negatively
Engaging Situationally (being ready to experience what contexts have to offer)
- Being open: seeking and seeing novelty in situations
- Being curious: scanning for novelty or being motivated to explore
- Being focused: being attentive to what is happening
- Being careful: reducing the likelihood of bad outcomes
- Being active: energizing yourself into the situation
- Being positive: initiating activities or changing situations to maintain confident emotional energy
- Seeking new experiences: actively searching for enjoyable and rewarding adventures
- Being mindful: appreciating the present and what it offers
- Caring: valuing another because they are important to you
Freeing Emotions (opening yourself up to fully feel emotions)
- Laughing: freely reacting to humorous fun
- Loving: unconditionally caring about someone
- Accepting love: taking in and appreciating the unconditional caring of others
- Feeling secure: having an inner sense of belonging
- Feeling joyful: appreciating what life is offering
- Crying: allowing yourself to feel emotions, both positive and negative, that trigger tears
- Playing: enjoying an activity
- Enjoying pleasure: taking delight from sensually relaxing experiences
Being Resilient (dealing with life’s unpleasant outcomes; showing grit)
- Persisting: continuing on a reasonable path despite low mood or mounting difficulties
- Adapting: changing direction when feedback to do so is reasonable and trusted
- Seeking help: accepting that you need outside assistance and asking for it
- Grieving: processing a major loss
- Addressing adversity: standing up to the complexity of life’s difficulties
- Using failures: looking for a “lesson” from each setback
- Coping: dealing effectively with a situation or issue that is difficult
- Toughening self-esteem: strengthening self-worth by overcoming difficulties and struggles
Creating an Emotional Pathway (collecting memorable situational examples)
- Identifying unfamiliar feelings: discerning an emotion and what it is informing you
- Being stoic: accepting that life situations often create discomfort for a time
- Recognizing triggers: connecting upsetting experiences to negative conditioning
- Writing to reflect: journaling life experiences to explore emotions
- Creating memories: intentionally storing positive instances or occasions
Process 2 Expanding Self-Efficacy (having belief in one’s own potential)
Preparing for a Performance (readying yourself before a display of skill)
- Recognizing unmet need: finding what is “empty” (missing) in the current situation
- Setting goals: identifying the purpose and the associated outcomes
- Planning: generating structured tasks that promote a successful performance
- Managing time: effectively and efficiently deciding how to allocate daily efforts
- Being organized: knowing what is needed and where to obtain it
- Being prepared: going over highlights and reminders about an upcoming performance
Performing in Real-time (taking charge of performance)
- Being disciplined: setting and following priorities and schedules
- Being decisive: making a definitive choice quickly
- Practicing deliberately: refining a performance to improve probability of success
- Working hard: maintaining intensity of work over time
- Being fully engaged: being completely immersed in an experience
- Owning performance: wanting to excel by doing it your own way to produce quality
- Satisficing: knowing the minimum requirements necessary to achieve a goal
- Bringing closure: wrapping up a current effort and moving on
Managing One’s Emotions (being skilled in self-care and uses of feelings)
- Sensing emotional confusion: realizing that unclear feelings must be dealt with
- Supplying a missing emotion: using a different or changed affective response required for success
- Identifying stressors: having a clear sense of work, home, and life pressures
- Managing daily stressors: dealing effectively with work, home, and life pressures and conflicts
- Renewing: recharging yourself for future performance
- Disengaging emotionally: taking a time out when feelings dominate rational thought
Managing Performance Emotions (taking charge of achievement-related issues)
- Accepting uncertainty: being ready to deal with unpredictable outcomes
- Dealing with negative outcomes: accepting and learning from poor results
- Managing frustration: controlling negative emotions in the face of challenges
- Managing anxiety: letting go of worry over things beyond your control
- Exhibiting self-confidence: smoothly adjusting performance to meet changing needs or goals
Practicing Social Management with Others (personally engaging with individuals)
- Competing: intentionally performing in a way that could lead to gaining or winning
- Being a good sport: enjoying performing and reacting with equanimity, regardless of who wins
- Responding to requests: respectfully accepting or rejecting appeals to help
- Supporting: affirming and acknowledging the value of others and their contributions
- Being non-defensive: being verbally and nonverbally calm in the face of judgmental challenges
- Acting: presenting a different self-representation for a performance
Practicing Social Management (relating emotionally within collective systems)
- Accepting external expectations: agreeing to quality expectations and time constraints
- Handling distress: effectively dealing with extremely unsettling social or emotional experiences
- Challenging the status quo: publicly questioning the validity of something commonly accepted
- Managing finances: keeping expenses within income sources over time
- Accessing needed resources: tapping into appropriate sources of supply or support to overcome affective barrier
- Being responsible: taking ownership for upholding your commitments
Practicing Intellectual Management (taking initiative to seek truth without bias)
- Recognizing your own bias: being conscious of how your values and feelings influence your thinking
- Preventing biases: choosing strategies to avoid known types of misjudgments
- Enjoying productive struggle: finding satisfaction in working on unclearly defined problems
- Managing dissonance: seeking consistency when addressing unresolved intellectual conflicts
- Suspending closure: avoiding premature judgements caused by assumptions or unfamiliarity
- Questioning conventional wisdom: challenging the way things are usually done
- Having intellectual humility: working to not overestimate strengths or underestimate weaknesses
Discerning Reality (separating valid judgment from emotional reaction)
- Managing a judgment: realizing that traits often are unreliable predictors of capabilities
- Controlling overreactions: striving for moderation in responses
- Acknowledging error: using reason to publicly concede invalid emotion-based judgments
- Reprocessing without emotions: setting aside the feeling element in reviewing an experience
Strengthening Self-Efficacy (increasing expectation of one’s own competence)
- Believing in unlimited potential: understanding that current achievements do not constrain future performance
- Analyzing performance: objectively assessing current capacity in a performance area
- Self-challenging: getting out of your comfort zone to increase growth opportunities
Process 3 Clarifying, Building, and Refining Values (strengthening core personal beliefs)
Discerning Values (recognizing habits, desires, and principled beliefs)
- Discovering the norm: determining the relationship of your values to other’s values
- Clarifying habits: articulating the “why” in consistent actions to define implicit values
- Sensing wrongness: noticing reactions inconsistent with what you believe and value
- Emulating others: mirroring behavior of others that matches what you value
- Identifying personal values: recognizing what matters most to you as an individual
- Establishing an ethical code: achieving an orderly system of values for life decisions
Valuing Independent Self (focusing on what you want to become)
- Clarifying interests: discovering what is deeply engaging for producing individual value
- Accepting ownership: being responsible and personally accountable for the choices you make
- Staying healthy: assuring long-term well-being of mind, body, and spirit
- Being true to self: Walking the walk of your values; following your inner compass
Valuing Self in Relation to Others (relating your standards to external influences)
- Trusting self: knowing that your values and capabilities are the most relevant to your situation
- Committing to self: believing that the value of your life is as important as anyone else’s
- Associating with high performers: seeking out those with integrated achievements and values
- Accepting forgiveness: feeling and showing gratitude when others pardon your wrongdoing
Valuing Others (expressing social values)
- Empathizing: sharing, emotionally, the pain and joy of others
- Valuing family: integrating family history and influences as a critical aspect of your life
- Valuing service: actively advancing or protecting the interests/well-being of others
- Being tolerant: valuing that others’ values are as important to them as yours are to you
- Valuing sanctity of life: believing that each person has intrinsic worth
- Being socially inclusive: publicly pursuing equity in relationships, organizations, and communities
Valuing Intellect (appreciating the unlimited capacity and spirit of humans)
- Valuing knowledge: learning from any source at any time for any purpose
- Valuing alternate perspectives: wanting to know others’ ways of reasoning and making meaning
- Valuing thinking: appreciating the power of cognitive processes
- Being evidence-based: intentionally focusing on facts and data vs. feelings and opinions
- Valuing best practices: being willing to assimilate and integrate what others’ do effectively
- Enjoying complexity: finding satisfaction in fully engaging with the natural intricacy of life
Integrating Cultural Values (enhancing your life by infusing human creativity)
- Integrating music: experiencing music as a sharing of emotional and cultural reactions
- Assimilating art: enjoying representations that are diverse in style, theme, content, and purpose
- Appreciating history: using data and narrative to connect with people and events of the past
- Valuing the written word: entering worlds of meaning created by diverse authors and poets
- Appreciating culinary experiences: exploring the cultural and creative aspects of food and nutrition
- Valuing traditions: seeking opportunities to share in rituals and customs different from your own
Valuing Life Opportunities (expanding by exploring new dimensions)
- Traveling: journeying in order to explore new places and experiences
- Seeking diversity: intentionally looking for value in varied and different contexts
- Embracing change: thriving on the inconsistencies of life and the unpredictability of the future
- Valuing creativity: appreciating using imagination and original ideas to create something
- Valuing growth: appreciating opportunities for increasing your capacity
Valuing Daily Life (making positive changes in your habits and attitudes)
- Valuing sensory wonders: mindfully taking in beauty in your environment
- Valuing aloneness: valuing time away from others for following personal interests and reflecting
- Preventing harm: making choices that reduce negative treatment of people, animals, and nature
- Living sustainably: minimizing your footprint on the environment by conscious daily actions
Expanding and Validating Your Value System (living the life you want)
- Validating accomplishments: designing your vita/resume to show what you have achieved
- Validating personal impact: recognizing the effect you have
- Validating added value: recognizing the worth you have contributed
- Extending values: challenging your principles in new situations and with diverse people
- Making meaning: valuing experiences or insights that push you beyond your current concerns
Process 4 Personal Growth (maturing into the person you value through self-determination)
Clarifying Your Personal Identity (growing individuality from the roles you play)
- Growing identities: experiencing life to prioritize and identify the key roles to develop
- Motivating self: setting up conditions that lead to desired actions
- Interpreting personal responses: capturing instances that clarify your values
- Being passionate: flourishing by doing those things that create the greatest meaning in your life
- Clarifying external identity: discovering how you are regarded across varied social contexts
Visioning Future Self (identifying the person you value and want to become)
- Updating life vision: mapping new paths to realize your identities in achieving goals and dreams
- Setting growth goals: identifying direction to increase capacity with plans to do so
- Gaining perspective: navigating among multiple vantage points to obtain true understanding
- Being philosophical: gaining deeper understanding of the nature of life and its meaning
Facilitating Self-growth (gaining the skills to pursue personal development)
- Accepting consequences: agreeing to bear or own the full outcome of an action or decision
- Changing reactions: purposefully trying out new or alternative reactions to specific feelings
- Changing behaviors: deliberately responding in a new way to old feelings and situations
- Being independent: seeking an appropriate level of autonomy in each role identity
- Committing to success: devoting yourself to accomplishing your goals or triumphing in a challenge
Self-Regulation (maintaining energy to keep running the marathon of life)
- Maintaining balance: practicing moderation
- Prioritizing: consistently putting the most important things first
- Being patient: waiting with equanimity when timing, conditions, and readiness are not right
- Getting unstuck: recognizing the lack of movement towards life’s goals and updates strategies
Process 5 Facilitating Growth Beyond Oneself (expanding meaning in life for humankind)
Moving Out in Front (making more of a difference)
- Feeling empowered: having all the factors needed to make a significant endeavor possible
- Being private: keeping your personal affairs out of the public sphere
- Being “thick-skinned”: reacting with patience and non-defensiveness when ideas are attacked
- Championing: working on behalf of a cause (e.g., person, product)
- Enduring: abiding, even in the face of adversity or a long-term challenge
Moving Beyond Yourself Emotionally (creating meaning and value for others)
- Transforming narratives: ending an unproductive impasse by creating a new, positive story
- Being a catalyst: causing or being the impetus for a significant action or outcome to occur
- Providing second chances: helping those who hurt or failed you in the hope that they can do better
- Committing to community: helping a group thrive through your significant involvement
- Behaving honorably: exhibiting the highest standards of virtue and integrity
Moving Beyond Yourself Socially (facilitating growth outside of yourself)
- Creating traditions: initiating a custom or ritual to make or mark meaning for a group
- Being patriotic: accepting call of duty for your nation
- Backing supporters: providing needed, timely help for those who have taken risks on your behalf
- Using one’s social power: exerting influence on others to achieve broad goals
- Setting personal narrative: assertively defining yourself so others can’t inaccurately define you
Moving Outside of Yourself (creating meaning and value beyond your life)
- Self-sacrificing: using your time, effort, and opportunities to help others
- Being courageous: taking action in spite of fear
- Developing spiritually: practicing what reflection tells you about bringing meaning to life
- Being compassionate: being moved by suffering and motivated to show sympathy, kindness, or caring
Welcome to the Classification of Learning Skills
Learning skills are at the heart of Process Education, which is a performance-based philosophy of education
integrating many different educational theories, processes, and tools in emphasizing the continuous development of
learning skills through the use of assessment principles in order to produce learner self-development.
Learning skills are aptitudes, abilities, and
behaviors related to increasing quality of learning performance.
Learning skills are distinct from disciplinary content and each
skill in this Classification is universal because it applies
across all contexts of performance. As performance quality
increases it enhances self-efficacy, the positive expectation
that one can add new performance capabilities, enhance
efficiencies and effectiveness of performances, and can use
insights from assessment to raise the quality of performances in
ways consistent with one’s goals. Self-growth is the increase in
the quality of one’s learning process in all aspects of life:
there is no limit on the extent and quality of development
possible. Individual learners can improve their ability to learn
by developing learning skills through personal experimentation
and intentional practice but also are encouraged to develop
mentoring and peer support strategies to increase performance
quality.
Learning
skills that improve transferable personal performance
capability, enhance the self, and promote a growth mindset are
known as growth skills. These appear in
green.
The set of 500 learning skills are divided into four different domains:
Cognitive, Social, Affective, and Assessment & Evaluation of
Quality. Use the navigation wheel at left to explore the CLS.
|
|
|
|
Cognitive Domain |
Social |
Affective |
Evaluation and Assessment of Quality |
Each DOMAIN is divided into PROCESSES.
Each process is divided into CLUSTERS. Each cluster contains
multiple LEARNING SKILLS. All processes and clusters are
clickable.
To view ALL learning skills at once,
click here.