In all of these examples, the role of the teacher and students was very clear. The teacher was to plan and create the outline for the scope and sequence of the PBL. Students were given criteria for judging the quality of their work and deadlines to meet. Throughout the process, the teacher facilitated student learning by conferencing with students on their progress, offering resources for learning such as field trips, guest speakers, web based collaborating and supplied feedback as needed. Students were given ownership and responsibilities at varying degrees depending on the grade level. Students were responsible for planning, organizing, researching, creating and ultimately presenting their projects. They had to work as a team to ensure everything was done on time and accurately. They were engaged in investigations through hands on learning and through technology to gather information, answer questions and formulate new questions. The ownership piece of PBL and the depth at which students are able to learn makes it clear to me why so many teachers and school districts adopt this method of teaching and learning.
The high impact of PBL on student learning and growth is distinct in these examples. Student engagement was prevalent throughout these projects because they had a hand in choosing the topic and/or formulating the questions they wanted answered. In addition, the topics were relevant and related directly to their lives. The processes, skills and products the students applied can carry over not only to classroom assignments but, to any career or entrepreneurship students wish to pursue. PBL addresses 21st century skills and processes in a very authentic way that sets students up for success throughout their lives.
References
Armstrong, S. (2002). Geometry students angle into architecture through project based learning. Retrieved on January 25, 2015 from http://www.edutopia.org/geometry-real-world-students-architects
Curtis, D. (2001). More fun than a barrell of...worms?! Retrieved on January 25, 2015 from http://www.edutopia.org/more-fun-barrel-worms
Curtis, D. (2002). March of the monarchs:students follow butterfly migration Retrieved on January 25, 2015 from http://www.edutopia.org/march-monarchs
Very nice review of the PBL exemplars! The changing nature of student learning and responsibility is, indeed, a key component of PBL.
ReplyDelete