Posts Tagged ‘Project Based Learning’

How to Revolt

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

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Embracing revolution is a quick way to be terminated in education. More than most jobs, teaching demands fealty to higher powers, no matter their expertise, fidelity to the standard curriculum, harmful or otherwise, and the willingness to narrow your horizons to fit the prevailing winds of politicians and other suits who can best decide whether you’re doing a good job or not.

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Districts Enter PBL Land

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

A decade ago, project based learning was popular in a few schools and with a few teachers, but hardly widespread. And the movement was growing very slowly.  At that time, education was caught up by standards and high stakes testing, a focus that discouraged teachers and schools from implementing inquiry-based learning.

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How PBL Educates the Whole Child

Saturday, February 18th, 2012

Over the past decade and a half, I’ve seen how well executed project based learning (PBL) can provide a joyful learning experience for students. Joy is not our number one standard, I realize, but when projects offer the right mix of challenge, engagement, and personalized support, blended with a motivating, meaningful learning experience that reaches deep into the soul, joy is the outcome. You can see it bubble up in the animated faces, big smiles, body language, and open-hearted response of students at the end of a good project. In other words, we’ve reached the whole child.

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PBL and Common Core Standards

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

The first question about Common Core Standards has been answered: What will they look like? The answer is: Very different. The internationally benchmarked standards will emphasize creativity, collaboration, critical thinking, presentation and demonstration, problem solving, research and inquiry, and career readiness.

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Teacher as Coach: The key to better projects

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

Our goal as PBL advocates is to design powerful projects. By powerful, I mean projects that fully engage students, offer a potent blend of skills and intellectual challenge, and prompt or awaken a deeper curiosity about life. Nothing less, I believe, is going to serve us in the decades ahead.

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Establishing a PBL-friendly Culture

Monday, October 31st, 2011

It’s surprising to me, but I see little discussion within education of why PBL succeeds. To experts in the field of human performance, however, there is no mystery. Three decades of research—including findings from youth development, organizational psychology, positive psychology, and emotional intelligence—has identified three core factors that maximize individual effort and the desire to achieve:

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From Groups to Teams: The Key to Powering Up PBL

Monday, April 25th, 2011

I don’t believe that we have yet tapped the true power of project based learning. Right now, PBL is still kind of a cool way to address standards and, too often these days, is simply coverage by another name. But its ultimate benefit is to help students think, learn, and operate in the new century by challenging them at deeper levels. That requires reversing the equation between skills and content: PBL is method for teaching students to find, process, understand, and share information, not a way to extend the industrial landscape of regurgitation and recall.  

 

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Want Your Students College Ready? Use PBL!

Sunday, March 13th, 2011

I notice that college readiness, always a hot topic, is getting hotter, for two reasons. One, the Obama administration has set a national goal of having the highest proportion of college-educated citizens in the world by 2020. And two, recent research reported by Education Week (12/23/2010) found that an average of two out of five college students are not equipped to handle the academic, financial, and social responsibilities of college. In other words, 40% of high school students aren’t ‘college ready.’

 

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The 21st Century Dilemma: Can we teach creativity?

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

The iron grip of the Industrial Age has finally loosened in education—a timely development, given that ten percent of the 21st century is over—and schools increasingly promise that students will learn the core skills of the global information age: How to collaborate, communicate, and be creative problem solvers. This commitment sounds admirable and timely, but a distressing number of educational and business leaders still ignore the core challenge of 21st century schools: Teaching skills is not remotely similar to teaching the photosynthesis cycle or the causes of World War I. In fact, the evolution in the mission of schools places the current system at direct odds with the future. Teaching people instead of stuff requires educators to draw upon the fields of psychology and human performance, which consider the industrial structure and mindset as barriers to performance and success.

Nowhere is the dilemma more acute than in the push to teach creativity, problem solving, and critical thinking. All of these ‘skills’ can be lumped into a mysterious set of processes used by human beings to make sense of their world, enter a dark tunnel of confusion, and reemerge with a solution or innovation in hand. How they occur, no one knows. How we teach the process, we’re not quite sure. Assessing the journey though his dark tunnel, or the end product, is even more difficult. Think of judging a piece of modern art. It’s that subjective.

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Project Based Learning and 21st Century Skills: The Tsunami Hits

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

For those who believe education can’t adapt to the 21st century, or represents a hopeless case of institutional inertia, good news has come. The headlines don’t reflect the news, largely because the mainstream media examines issues nearly irrelevant to the future of learning and the education of 21st century children. Teacher evaluation, testing, national curriculum standards, Texas textbooks, and funding dominate the discussions about education. But the real news is that the old paradigm of teaching and learning is finally breaking down, and schools are adopting, en masse, powerful, accountable methods that prepare young people to live in their world rather than ours.

Known as project based learning (or, in a newer version, as project learning), these methods help students master 21st century workplace skills, work alongside adults much as apprentices once did, learn sufficient academic knowledge to qualify as a ‘learned’ person in today’s world, and still develop sharp problem solving and creative abilities that will serve them well in industry and life.

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