The clear formulation of educational objectives is a central condition for effective teaching and learning. This article examines three widely used instruments for designing such objectives: Bloom’s Taxonomy, SMART technology, and the ABCD model. Bloom’s Taxonomy provides a hierarchy of cognitive processes that helps teachers move learners from simple remembering to higher-order thinking. SMART technology offers a set of five criteria — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound — that turn general intentions into concrete and verifiable goals. The ABCD model defines four components of a complete objective: Audience, Behavior, Condition, and Degree. Using a descriptive and comparative method based on the analysis of scholarly literature, the study explains the theoretical basis of each instrument and shows how they can be combined in practice. The results suggest that the three tools are complementary rather than competing: Bloom’s Taxonomy guides the cognitive level, the ABCD model structures the wording, and SMART technology ensures measurability and feasibility. The article concludes that the integrated use of these instruments improves the quality of lesson planning, assessment, and learning outcomes, and it offers practical recommendations for teachers and curriculum designers.
Fayziyeva Maftuna Kamolovna (Wed,) studied this question.