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Beyond Bloom: Why transformation, not creation, represents the peak of learning in the AI era

Sat, 15th Nov 2025

Introduction 

For decades, Bloom's Taxonomy has served as a cognitive compass in education, guiding educators through layered levels of the critical thinking process from basic  recall to the celebrated peak of creation. In this reframed model, AI is taken in  consideration to go beyond where create was once the peak and to reach for more in  the cognitive areas to synthesize, design, compose, or invent something entirely  new. 

The world has definitely changed in a very short time. 

In the age of AI, where generative tools can write, code, design, and problem-solve in  seconds, we are being called to reevaluate what we consider the "highest" form of  learning. When technology can create at scale, faster - and sometimes better - than a  human, we must ask what remains distinctly ours? 

The answer lies not in what we can produce, but in what we can transform. What is transformation in learning? 

To transform is to take existing knowledge, tools, or ideas and reshape them into  something with deeper relevance, renewed meaning, or broader impact. It is more  than altering content, it's about re-contextualizing, re-framing, and re-directing  knowledge in a way that signals authentic understanding. 

Transformation requires critical thinking, emotional intelligence, ethical judgment,  and a deep awareness of audience and environment. It is not simply doing more  with information; it takes us a step further. It is how we do better with it. 

This doesn't mean creation is obsolete. Instead, creation becomes a part of the  process, not the pinnacle. It becomes a means to transformation, one of many tools  we use to iterate meaning, rather than the final destination. 

Why transformation now? 

The AI era has accelerated content abundance. Students are flooded with  information and tools to generate essays, images, code, and solutions. However,

abundance without discernment can dilute meaning. That's where transformation  becomes essential. Transformation sharpens focus, invites reflection, and demands  intentionality. 

Transformation also mirrors what the workforce increasingly values: adaptability,  ethical reasoning, contextual intelligence, and the ability to transfer knowledge  across domains. In fast-changing, advancing fields, what you know may matter less  than what you can do with what you know, especially when the "what" is constantly  shifting. 

Rethinking cognitive hierarchies 

If we were to completely rethink and redraw our learning taxonomies today,  transformation would not just sit at the top. Rather, it would anchor the entire  structure. It would also, perhaps, ask different questions: 

  • Can the learner see the broader implications of a concept? 
  • Can they repurpose knowledge for new audiences or challenges?
  • Can they challenge assumptions, or reconstruct meaning for deeper insight? 

It is less about producing polished outputs and more about provoking change in  mindset, in community, and in context. 

What this means for educators 

This shift is not just theoretical. It changes how we design assessments,  assignments, and experiences. It means: 

  • Moving beyond product-focused rubrics to evaluate adaptability, nuance, and  voice. 
  • Asking students to reflect on how a tool shaped their process or how they  might apply knowledge differently elsewhere. 
  • Centreing co-creation and feedback loops where students aren't just  performing knowledge but engaging with it. 

And importantly, it means helping students see themselves not as passive  consumers or even active producers, but as transformers of knowledge, culture, and  systems. 

From bloom to beyond 

The power of transformation lies in its humanity. It cannot be automated, 

templated, or replicated easily. It is fueled by empathy, curiosity, and a desire to do  more than just create. It is to make meaning, foster impact, and shape what comes  next. 

So yes, AI can create. 

But only humans can transform. 

And maybe that is the real pinnacle of learning in this moment.

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