Sally Stuart
GT Specialist
Review the basics of PBL
PBL Activities including CCSS
Time to develop your own PBL lesson/s
– Listening and speaking – Comprehension and Communication
– Listening and speaking – Presentation
– Writing – Research
– Others will be based on your content area.
(Reading Informational texts, Writing, and Math)
But also, why do we integrate subjects?
In Project Based Learning (PBL), students go through an extended process of inquiry in response to a complex question, problem, or challenge. Rigorous projects help students learn key academic content and practice 21st Century
Skills (such as collaboration, communication & critical thinking). www.bie.org
BIE, in PBL in the Elementary Grades , states “PBL is valuable because it effectively teaches content knowledge and skills, builds deeper understanding of concepts, and makes a school curriculum more engaging and meaningful for students.
• During the projects, students will inquire, study, plan, evaluate, compare, collaborate, manage, create and present.
(Reinventing Project-Based Learning,2007)
• Buck Institute
It is an effective way to learn content knowledge and skills.
PBL is meant for the students to delve deep into the content area by creating a project, answering a question, solving a problem or resolving an issue.
It makes the curriculum more engaging and interesting.
It is a task that is relevant to the students’ lives. They can apply the skill to the real world.
Builds readiness for the 21 st century.
In the business world, successful employees, managers, entrepreneurs and leaders in the 21 century economy not only need the skills and knowledge taught in school, but to learn how to acquire knowledge and skills, evaluate and use information, work as teams, solve problems and think critically, manage complex tasks and communicate using a variety of media. The skills are useful for life in general.
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• Problem Solving
• Creative Thinking
• Critical Thinking
• Communication
• Collaboration
• Social Skills
• Technology Literacy
• Cross-cultural Skills
• Information Media Literacy
• Allows teacher to work more closely with students acting as a coach instead of “deliverer of knowledge”.
• Teacher is the project manager who teaches the content knowledge and skills needed.
Significant content – derived from standards and academic subject areas.
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21 st century skills – Skills valuable for today’s world
In-depth inquiry – rigorous, extended process of asking questions, using resources and developing answers.
Driving Question – Open-ended question that students explore
Need to know – students see the need to gain knowledge, understand concepts and apply skills.
Voice and choice – Students are allowed to make some choices about products, use of time, and how they work.
Revision and reflection – Students use feedback to consider additions and changes.
Public audience – Students present their work to other people beyond the classroom.
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
Peer Review Protocol
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
Oklahoma Tornado Disaster: As it Happened
5.20
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
• Rubric
Controlling Factors
Blank Rubric
Blank Rubric2
Learning Outcomes
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
• Rubric
• Group Contract
Example
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
• Rubric
• Group Contract
• Research and collaboration
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
• Rubric
• Group Contract
• Research and collaboration
• Assessment and adjustment
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
• Rubric
• Group Contract
• Research and collaboration
• Assessment and adjustment
• Presentations
PBL: Start to Finish
• Start with the Standards
• Critical Friends
• Entry Event/Document
• Need to Know
• Rubric
• Group Contract
• Research and collaboration
• Assessment and adjustment
• Presentations
• Final Assessment
• Courtyard Redesign by bie.org
Controlling Factors Entry Event
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• Farms and Food
Read Entry Document for the
Old State House Museum of AR History
Try to make projects meaningful and on current issues.
For example:
• Community events
• Commercials and what they sell
• Unsung Heroes
• World of 7 Billion
• Cardboard Challenge
• Etc.
You may divide into grade levels or work on your own.
• Use remaining time to develop a PBL unit
• www.edutopia.com
• http://www.bie.org/
• http://www.youthlearn.org/learning/learning
• Carolyn Coil, Differentiated Activities & Assessments Using the Common Core Standards, ISBN 978-1-
937113-05-6
• Buck Institute for Ed, PBL in the Elem. Grades, ISBN 978-0-974043-1-7
• Buck Institute for Ed , PBL Starter Kit, ISBN 978-0-9740343-2-4
• http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0398.pdf
• http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_berman_democracy_4/7/1859/475959.cw/index.html
– http://magazines.scholastic.com/election-2012
– http://www.edutopia.org/pdfs/stw/edutopia-stw-maine-project-learning-casco-bay-give-me-shelter-oralhistory-assessment.pdf
Session Evaluation QR code