What Is Project BasedLearning
What Is Project BasedLearning
BasedLearning (PBL)?
Project-based learning is a teaching approach that engages students in sustained,
collaborative real-world investigations. Projects are organized around a driving
question, and students participate in a variety of tasks that seek to meaningfully
address this question.
Project Based Learning is a teaching method in which students gain knowledge and skills by
working for an extended period of time to investigate and respond to a complex question, problem, or
challenge. Essential Elements of PBL include:
Significant Content - At its core, the project is focused on teaching students important
knowledge and skills, derived from standards and key concepts at the heart of academic
subjects.
21st century competencies - Students build competencies valuable for todays world, such
as problem solving, critical thinking, collaboration, communication, and creativity/innovation,
which are explicitly taught and assessed.
In-Depth Inquiry - Students are engaged in an extended, rigorous process of asking
questions, using resources, and developing answers.
Driving Question - Project work is focused by an open-ended question that students
understand and find intriguing, which captures their task or frames their exploration.
Need to Know - Students see the need to gain knowledge, understand concepts, and apply
skills in order to answer the Driving Question and create project products, beginning with an
Entry Event that generates interest and curiosity.
Voice and Choice - Students are allowed to make some choices about the products to be
created, how they work, and how they use their time, guided by the teacher and depending
on age level and PBL experience.
Critique and Revision - The project includes processes for students to give and receive
feedback on the quality of their work, leading them to make revisions or conduct further
inquiry.
Public Audience - Students present their work to other people, beyond their classmates and
teacher.
According to the Buck Institute for Education (BIE), project-based learning has its roots in experiential
education and the philosophy of John Dewey. The method of project-based learning emerged due to
developments in learning theory in the past 25 years. The BIE suggests, Research in neuroscience and
psychology has extended cognitive and behavioral models of learning which support traditional direct
instruction to show that knowledge, thinking, doing, and the contexts for learning are inextricably
tied.1 Because learning is a social activity, teaching methods can scaffold on students prior experiences
and include a focus on community and culture. Furthermore, because we live in an increasingly more
technological and global society, teachers realize that they must prepare students not only to think about
new information, but they also must engage them in tasks that prepare them for this global citizenship.
Based on the developments in cognitive research and the changing modern educational environment in the
latter part of the 20th Century, project-based learning has gained popularity.
Begin with the end in mind and plan for this end result.
Manage the process: Find tools and strategies for successful projects. 4
Debating ideas
Making predictions
Drawing conclusions
Creating artifacts