Project Based Learning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 52
About This Presentation
Title:

Project Based Learning

Description:

Assessment Practices. From Buck Institute Web site. http://www.bie.org ... Buck Institute for Education: http://www.bie.org/pbl/pbloverview/definition.php ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:73
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 53
Provided by: linda243
Category:
Tags: based | buck | learning | project

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Project Based Learning


1
Project Based Learning
  • Linda Ullah, M.A., M.Ed.
  • Krause Center for Innovation
  • Foothill College, Los Altos Hills CA
  • ullahlinda_at_foothill.edu

2
Think about these things
  • Subject Area(s) you teach
  • Grade(s) you teach
  • Why do you want to do a project with your
    students?
  • Summarize your students
  • Learning styles
  • Needs
  • Motivation to learn
  • Interests
  • Do you currently use PBL in your classroom?

3
Life Is Project Based Learning
4
But where is the disconnect between life and
school?
5
PBL is NOT New
CARL ROGERS 1902 - 1987
JOHN DEWEY 1859-1952
LEV VYGOTSKY 1896-1934
SOCRATES 470-399 B.C.
BENJAMIN BLOOM 1913-1999
SEYMOUR PAPART
JEAN PIAGET 1896-1980
JEROME BRUNER 1915-CURRENT
Learning an active process in which students
construct new ideas or concepts based on their
current knowledge.
6
PBL engages students and provides an environment
for the acquisition of skills needed in higher
education and today's workplace. Projects are a
great way to teach the curricular content we have
been teaching for years while students truly
build skills we have always wished and hoped they
learned along the way.
-Drake High School, San Francisco, CA
http//drake.marin.k12.ca.us/academics/pbl/pblfs.h
tm
7
Overview
  • Define PBLMM
  • See successful examples
  • Learn about project planning
  • Begin thinking process for planning your own
    projects

8
Seven Elements of Project-Based Learning
  • Standards Based
  • Assessment
  • Student Centered
  • Collaboration
  • Real World Connection
  • Extended Time Frame
  • Multimedia

Challenge 2000 Multimedia Project http//pblmm.k1
2.ca.us
9
Six As of Project Based Learning
  • Authenticity
  • Academic Rigor
  • Applied Learning
  • Academic Exploration
  • Adult Connection
  • Assessment Practices

From Buck Institute Web site http//www.bie.org
10
Comparison of 7 Elements and 6 As of PBL
  • Standards Based
  • Assessment
  • Student Centered
  • Collaboration
  • Real World Connection
  • Extended Time Frame
  • Multimedia
  • Authenticity
  • Academic Rigor
  • Applied Learning
  • Academic Exploration
  • Adult Connection
  • Assessment Practices

11
Comparison of 7 Elements and 6 As of PBL
  • Standards Based
  • Assessment
  • Student Centered
  • Collaboration
  • Real World Connection
  • Extended Time Frame
  • Multimedia
  • Authenticity
  • Academic Rigor
  • Applied Learning
  • Academic Exploration
  • Adult Connection
  • Assessment Practices

12
Another Way to Look at What is PBL
  • Content
  • Conditions
  • Activities
  • Results

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
13
Content
  • Compelling ideas
  • Problems presented in their full complexity
  • Students finding interdisciplinary connections
    between ideas
  • Students struggling with ambiguity, complexity,
    and unpredictability
  • Real-world questions that students care about

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
http//www.garlic.com/lullah/brazilus/water.html
Example
14
Conditions
  • Support student autonomy
  • Students taking part in a community of inquiry
    and pursuing coursework in a social context
  • Students being called upon to exhibit task- and
    time-management behaviors both individually and
    as part of the group
  • Students directing their own work and taking
    control over their own learning
  • Students simulating the professional work of the
    scholar, researcher, engineer, reporter, planner,
    manager, and other practitioners

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
Example
http//www.lullah.com/gedc.html
15
Activities
Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
  • Investigative and engaging
  • Students conducting multi-faceted investigations
    extending over long periods of time
  • Students encountering obstacles, seeking
    resources, and solving problems in response to an
    overall challenge
  • Students making their own connections among ideas
    and acquiring new skills as they work on
    different tasks
  • Students using authentic tools (i.e., real-life
    resources and technologies)
  • Students getting feedback about the worth of
    their ideas from expert sources and realistic
    tests

16
Results
Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
  • Real-world outcomes
  • Students generating complex intellectual products
    that demonstrate their learning (e.g., models,
    reports)
  • Students participating in their own assessment
  • Students held accountable for choosing how they
    will demonstrate their competence
  • Students exhibiting growth in frequently
    neglected areas important for real-world
    competence social skills, life skills,
    self-management skills, and dispositions to learn
    on one's own

http//www.stleos.pvt.k12.ca.us/StLeosSite/classes
/Seventh/PROJECT/geoindex.html
Example
17
How Do I Begin?
  • Planning
  • Begin with an Essential Question
  • What is important to your students
  • What is the deep learning--the enduring
    understanding
  • What are the necessary skills
  • Standards
  • Prerequisite knowledge (prior knowledge)
  • Prerequisite skills
  • Skills and knowledge to to be embedded into the
    project

18
What Do We Mean by Understanding?
Someone who understands...
L.Ullah
19
Engage Students
in problem solving in higher order thinking
skills in critical thinking
to solve real problems for a real audience
20
Enduring Understanding
Grant Wiggins, Jay McTighe Understanding by
Design http//www.acsd.org/readingroom/books/wiggi
ns98book.htmlchap2
21
McTighe and Wiggins
22
What does this look like
Middle School Discrimination Project
http//pblmm.k12.ca.us/projects/projects.htm
Talking Links Middle School and ESL
Kindergarten Language Arts Project http//linc.ca.
campusgrid.net/home/ProjectPages
Third Grade Young Authors Faire Living
Books Ohlone HyperStudio Project
23
Traditional Instruction Emphasizes
Project Based Learning Emphasizes
  • Focus of curriculum
  • Content coverage
  • Knowledge of facts
  • Learning "building-block" skills in isolation
  • of complex problem-solving skills
  • Focus of curriculum
  • Depth of understanding
  • Comprehension of concepts and principles
  • Development
  • Scope and sequence
  • Follows student interest
  • Large units composed of complex problems or
    issues
  • Broad, interdisciplinary focus
  • Scope and sequence
  • Follows fixed curriculum
  • Proceeds block by block, unit by unit
  • Narrow, discipline-based focus

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
24
Traditional Instruction Emphasizes
Project Based Learning Emphasizes
  • Teaching role
  • Follows student interest
  • Large units composed of complex problems or
    issues
  • Broad, interdisciplinary focus
  • Teaching role
  • Follows fixed curriculum
  • Proceeds block by block, unit by unit
  • Narrow, discipline-based focus
  • Focus of assessment
  • Process and products
  • Tangible accomplishments
  • Criterion performances and gains over time
  • Demonstration of understanding
  • Focus of assessment
  • Products
  • Test scores
  • Comparisons with others
  • Reproduction of information

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
25
Traditional Instruction Emphasizes
Project Based Learning Emphasizes
  • Materials of instruction
  • Direct or original sources printed materials,
    interviews, documents, and others
  • Data and materials developed by students
  • Materials of instruction
  • Texts, lectures and presentations
  • Teacher-developed exercise sheets and activities
  • Use of technology
  • Central, integral
  • Directed by students
  • Useful for enhancing student presentations or
    amplifying student capabilities
  • Use of technology
  • Ancillary, peripheral
  • Administered by teachers
  • Useful for enhancing teachers' presentations

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
26
Traditional Instruction Emphasizes
Project Based Learning Emphasizes
  • Classroom context
  • Students working alone
  • Students competing with one another
  • Students receiving information from an instructor
  • Classroom context
  • Students working in groups
  • Students collaborating with one another
  • Students constructing, contributing, and
    synthesizing information
  • Student role
  • Carry out self- directed learning activities
  • Discoverer, integrator, and presenter of ideas
  • Students define their own tasks and work
    independently for large blocks of time
  • Communicate, show affect, produce, take
    responsibility
  • Student role
  • Carry out instructions
  • Memorizer and repeater of facts
  • Students receive and complete brief tasks
  • Listen, behave, speak only when spoken to

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
27
Traditional Instruction Emphasizes
Project Based Learning Emphasizes
  • Short-term goals
  • Understanding and application of complex ideas
    and processes
  • Mastery of integrated skills
  • Short-term goals
  • Knowledge of facts, terms, content
  • Mastery of isolated skills
  • Long-range goals
  • Depth of knowledge
  • Graduates who have the dispositions and skills to
    engage in sustained, autonomous, lifelong learning
  • Long-range goals
  • Breadth of knowledge
  • Graduates who have the knowledge to perform
    successfully on standard achievement tests

Buck Institute for Education http//www.bie.org/p
bl/pbloverview/definition.php
28
Standards Based Multidisciplinary
  • Meets the requirements in more than one area
    across the curriculum

29
(No Transcript)
30
The Backwards Planning Process
McTighe J, Wiggins G (op cit)
31
(No Transcript)
32
Assessment
McTighe J, Wiggins G (op cit)
33
(No Transcript)
34
Goals and Objectives
35
Real World Connection
  • Why will students want to learn this or do this
    project?
  • Who is the intended audience (beyond the
    classroom)?
  • Will students have the opportunity to work with
    experts or present their projects to experts or
    people in the field?
  • What is the value of this project?

36
  • Extended Time Frame
  • How much time do you plan to spend on this topic?
  • How much time will it take to do this project or
    activity?
  • How much in class time is necessary?
  • What will students do in class?
  • How much out of class time is needed?
  • What will students do on their own?
  • How much computer lab time is needed?
  • Is the lab available?

37
Extended Time Frame
Pre Production Production Post Production
38
Pre Production
  • Reflect on the assignment of the project
  • Begin preliminary research to determining what is
    is they are interested in doing and learning
  • Form project teams (with teacher assistance)
  • Determine what products they will create and
    produce
  • Do more research
  • Pitch their project/product ideas to the who
    group for "approval" suggestions or rethinking
  • Continue their research
  • Write project plan
  • Write story, report, script...
  • Storyboard
  • Get plan and storyboard approved

39
Production
  • Implementation of the project conceived during
    pre-production
  • Displaying and reporting data discovered during
    research
  • Building, constructing, creating
  • Multimedia production
  • Hands on activities
  • Experimenting
  • Product creation

40
Post Production
  • Peer review
  • Final editing
  • Display
  • Presentation
  • Reflection
  • Application for Awards
  • Expert Review

41
Can you name these people?
Did you need help? Help is collaboration.
42
Collaboration
  • Working with others
  • Leadership
  • Cooperation
  • Responsibility
  • Business/industry connection

43
  • Collaboration
  • Will students work in collaborative teams?
  • Will students individual work contribute to a
    whole class project?
  • Will you collaborate with other teachers?
  • Will experts be involved in this proejct?
  • Who and how will they be involved?

44
  • Student Decision Making
  • What decisions must you, as the teacher, make
  • What decisions will you let your students make?

45
(No Transcript)
46
Addressing Students Multiple Intelligences
47
Using Technology as a Tool to Deepen
Understanding -Students are
  • Working collaboratively
  • Making meaning from their learning
  • Engaged in the learning process
  • Using higher order critical thinking skills
  • Excited about learning
  • Creating high quality multimedia products

48
Teacher/Student Created Projects
  • Earn While You Learn Projects
  • http//linc.ca.campusgrid.net/home/ProjectPages
  • BioTechnology
  • Melinda Kindelspire and Cynthia Grace, Castro
    Valley High School
  • http//www.techscape.org/projects/BiotechGenetics.
    html

49
  • The Art of Japan
  • Esther Wojcicki, Palo Alto HS
  • http//www.techscape.org/mp/mp2.html
  • Robotics and Community Service
  • William Dunbar, Gunn HS
  • http//www.foothill.fhda.edu/cfi/award.html
  • 180 Days Around the World--World Literatures
  • Jodi Edwards, Santa Teresa High School
  • http//www.nsawards.com/winners/00calwinner3.asp

50
  • Our Towns Community Service Learning Project
    Discovering Our Past, Shaping Our Future
  • Michael A. Goldstein, Tamalpais High School
  • http//homepage.mac.com/socialissues/
  • Real World Geometry
  • Thomas Pulchny, St Leos School, San Jose
  • http//www.stleos.pvt.k12.ca.us/StLeosSite/classes
    /Seventh/PROJECT/geoindex.html
  • The Amistad Case--A Mock Trial
  • Tom Ferenbacher, Hoover High School, San Diego
  • http//projects.edtech.sandi.net/hoover/amistad/te
    acher.index..html

51
Other Projects
  • The Marble Roll
  • Online Science-a-Thon
  • http//scithon.terc.edu/MarbleRoll2000/index.cfm
  • City Building
  • Doreen Nelson, CSU Pomona
  • http//www.csupomona.edu/dnelson

52
Other Online Resources
  • SCORE-Schools of California Online Resources for
    Educators
  • http//www.score.k12.ca.us
  • EDs Oasis
  • http//www.classroom.com/edsoasis/
  • Kathy Schrocks Guide
  • http//school.discovery.com/schrockguide/
  • Bernie Dodges WebQuest Page
  • http//edweb.sdsu.edu/webquest/webquest.html
  • Earn While You Learn Resources
  • http//linc.ca.campusgrid.net/home/EWYLResources
  • Exemplary Projects Home Page
  • http//www.pblnet.org/mp/mp-research.html
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com