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Project-Based Learning (PBL)

Resources for Assessment in Project-Based Learning

Looking for tools and strategies for effective assessment in project-based learning? To support you, we’ve assembled this guide to helpful resources from Edutopia and beyond.

April 15, 2014 Updated June 2, 2016
Illustration by Cait Camarata

Project-based learning (PBL) demands excellent assessment practices to ensure that all learners are supported in the learning process. With good assessment practices, PBL can create a culture of excellence for all students and ensure deeper learning for all. We’ve compiled some of the best resources from Edutopia and the web to support your use of assessment in PBL, including information about strategies, advice on how to address the demands of standardized tests, and summaries of the research.

PBL Assessment Foundations

  • Demonstrating Authentic and Rigorous Learning (Edutopia, 2015)

    Angela Haydel DeBarger describes research-based strategies for implementing PBL projects that are rigorous and engaging: the importance of having students create products that address the driving question, providing ongoing opportunities for feedback and reflection, and presenting work to an authentic audience.

  • Assessment and Project Based Learning: Frequently Asked Questions (New Tech Network, 2016)

    Explore responses to questions directed toward teachers in the field, in this post by Andrew Larson. You'll find strategies for reporting on content and success skills; educators also describe the use of traditional assessments like quizzes and tests.

  • Practical PBL: The Ongoing Challenges of Assessment (Edutopia, 2012)

    High school teacher Katie Piper shares honest feedback about the challenges associated with assessing students fairly during the PBL process, where collaboration is key and critical. Some strategies include conducting individual assessment of team products, as well as "weighted scoring" and "role-based" assessment practices. 

  • Going Gradeless: Student Self-Assessment in PBL (Edutopia, 2016)

    In this blog post, classroom teacher Matt Weyers explains how he shifted the conversation in his classroom from getting a grade to student learning. He shares his step-by-step plan and also the great results.

  • Expeditionary Assessment: PBL Lessons From Ron Berger (Getting Smart, 2013)

    Read about how PBL school model Expeditionary Learning approaches assessment within project-based learning, in this interview with Ron Berger. Berger emphasizes student ownership of the assessment process and references several videos of sample PBL project assessments. 

  • Evaluation Within Project-Based Learning (Edutopia, 2016)

    In this post from Michael Hernandez, find ideas for conducting multidimensional evaluation to encourage students, provide meaningful feedback, and set students up for success within project-based learning.

PBL and Formative Assessment Practices

  • PBL Pilot: Formative Assessment in PBL (Edutopia, 2015)

    In another blog post from Matt Weyers, find great tips on using formative assessment within the PBL process to drive student learning. Weyers explains how to use the driving question to prompt reflection and the "Need to Know" to check for understanding.

  • How to Get High-Quality Student Work in PBL (Edutopia, 2013)

    John Larmer, editor in chief for the Buck Institute for Education, shares practical strategies to ensure students submit their best work, including reflective questions for teachers to use: questions around rubrics, formative assessment, authenticity, and time for revision and reflection. These assessment practices help students improve and share exemplary work.

  • Using Formative Assessment to Put Students on the Winning Streak (ISTE, 2015)

    Writer Suzie Boss explains how formative assessment within project cyles can empower students to learn more and experience more success. Along the way, she underscores the value of framing mistakes as learning opportunities, the excitement of risk-taking, and the importance of describing clear learning goals throughout a project. 

PBL and Standardized Tests

  • The Challenge of Assessing Project-Based Learning (District Administration, 2012)

    In this article for District Administration, regular Edutopia blogger Suzie Boss tells the story of how schools are meeting the challenge of standardized tests and moving past the “bubble” exam; she also highlights how educators are overcoming fear and anxiety around assessing critical thinking and content.

  • Reinventing AP Courses With Rigorous Project-Based Learning (Edutopia, 2021)

    This Knowledge in Action research project from the University of Washington explores how well-designed PBL can meet, and in many ways, surpass what the AP exam assesses, including both content learning objectives and goals around 21st-century skills. 

  • PBL and Standardized Tests? It Can Work! (Edutopia, 2012)

    Edutopia blogger Andrew Miller provides specific and practical strategies to address the demands of standardized tests while doing great PBL projects. In addition to embedding standardized tests prompts within the project, Miller suggests implementing PBL projects where they fit, targeting power standards, and examining standardized tests to see what students will need to be successful. Because these projects are powerful learning tools, there's no need to wait for testing season to get started.

PBL Assessment Research

We hope these resources on PBL Assessment help ensure that students learn not only content but also the skills they need to be "future ready." Use these ideas and tools to alleviate concerns you have around assessment and PBL and to support the design of effective PBL projects.

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