Problem-Based Learning
Problem-Based Learning
op a lesson using the problem-based learning strategy; and Show appreciation in the teaching profession by developing a synthesis paper.
The whole art of teaching is only the art of awakening the natural curiosity of young mind for the purpose of satisfying it afterwards. (France in Barell, 2003).
It requires individualization of approach, so that one must study each child carefully, keep observation over the period of time, study the growth and development in sensory like motor area, intellectual area, emotional area, social area, language area and so on.
It means that curriculum must be thought of in terms of activities and experiences which appeal most to the child.
A learner needs to be exposed to various experiences were he or she can explore, make judgments and learn.
When a learner is given the opportunities to discover new connections of what he/she previously learn and what he/she presently experienced, then he/she begins to form new knowledge.
One of the teaching strategies that develops the inquisitive minds of the learners is
The approach prepares the class for involving students in projects relatively long-term, problem-focused, and meaningful units of instruction that integrate concept from a number of disciplines or fields of study.
Within this framework, students pursue solutions to authentic problem by asking and refining questions, debating ideas, making predictions, designing plans or experiments, collecting and analyzing data, drawing conclusions, communicating their ideas and findings to others, asking new questions, and creating products.
Feedback from others permits the learners to reflect on and extend their emergent knowledge and to revise their product if necessary.
Project needs to be planned and implemented with attention to student motivation and knowledge needed to engage in cognitively difficult work (Good and Brophy, 2003)
When students are exposed into problem-based learning, they tend to use their critical thinking skills and become more reflective. In this case, they are able to develop their higher order thinking skills which are needed in attacking/solving similar problem in the future.
Project-based learning is also problem-based learning (PBL) involves a collaborative effort of both teachers and students to come up with a solution to a problem by going far beyond their minimum efforts, making meaning and connections, and answering open-ended questions that can be found in real-life settings.
Portfolios may contain a learning log where students list what they need to know or the learning issues they need to understand better.
Specially, Kunts and Hessler (cited by Weishaar and Scott, 2006) proposed that case studies are designed to stimulate thinking and to encourage professionals in education to:
1. Employ higher-order thinking skills.
Cases are stories to tell; they are stories with a message. They are not simply narratives for entertainment; they are stories to educate.
Educational Implications:
Problem-based learning provides learners opportunities to construct their own knowledge through self-directed activities.
Learners become more reflective of what they are doing, pay attention to every possibility in solving the problem at hand and develop to be more independent learners. At the end, they develop their critical thinking skills.
I need to remember the following (Bosse et al., 2010) Problem-Based Learning Taxonomy
Explanatory Knowledge Explanation problem- WHAT Analysis, synthesis, evaluation
I need to remember the following (Bosse et al., 2010) Problem-Based Learning Taxonomy
Descriptive Knowledge Fact-finding problem-WHAT Comprehension, analysis, synthesis
I need to remember the following (Bosse et al., 2010) Problem-Based Learning Taxonomy
Procedural Knowledge Strategy problem-HOW Analysis, synthesis, evaluation
I need to remember the following (Bosse et al., 2010) Problem-Based Learning Taxonomy
Personal Knowledge Moral dilemma-WHY Evaluation