TEACHING MODULE
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Project-Based Learning (PBL)
Teaching About Project-Based Learning
Materials and resources for organizing projects.
In this section, you will find materials and resources for teaching about project-based learning, whether you are conducting a two- or three-hour session or class or can spend a day or two on the topic. We believe you will find much here from which you can build a set of experiences tailored to class participants for the purpose of exploring PBL.
This section includes the following elements:
- A PowerPoint Presentation
- Activities that engage participants in thinking and talking about PBL
- Suggested readings, including links to pertinent Web sites
- Sample session schedules

Rural Washington Students Connect with the World:
First and second graders sent comfort quilts to hurricane victims in Puerto Rico and to sick children in Pakistan as part of one iEARN project.
Credit: Kristi Rennebohm Franz
POWERPOINT PRESENTATION
Content:
This PowerPoint presentation introduces PBL, based on research and case studies, and discusses why the method should be used, what it is, and how to begin, touching on the process of questioning, planning, scheduling, monitoring, assessing, and evaluating. The presentation then asks for group participation, and activities to be done in small groups are suggested on the final slides. Active links are provided for Web sites.
Description:
The PowerPoint presentation, available online, consists of seventeen slides. If you have Microsoft PowerPoint capability on your computer, you can download the PowerPoint file and show it as a PowerPoint presentation in your classroom; you can also make changes, insert your own course information, and use it as you would any PowerPoint presentation. In addition, each slide in the downloaded and online versions contains Speaker Notes you can use as lecture notes when you show the presentation.
If you do not have Microsoft PowerPoint, you can download PowerPoint Viewer, which will allow you to share this presentation with an audience but will not allow you to edit it in any way.
Uses:
You can use the HTML version online during class time if you have a computer and a presentation system with Internet access; use it as you would any lecture presentation material. Alternatively, download the PowerPoint file to your hard drive or CD-ROM for use on your laptop or a classroom computer; open and run the PowerPoint file just as you would any other PowerPoint presentation.
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ACTIVITIES
1. Prepare Participants for Critical Viewing
Before watching a set of videos that demonstrate PBL at work, use these ideas to organize discussions:
- Ask participants, "What questions do you have about good PBL projects that might be answered by looking carefully at a video of students working on a project?"
- Suggest that participants view the videos shown with particular questions in mind. For example, they can be asked to watch the Newsome Park video while looking for evidence of how students were included in developing a key question for a project.
2. Read Articles and Watch Videos
Share the following articles and videos with class participants:
- "More Fun Than a Barrel of . . . Worms?!"
- Newsome Park

- "Geometry in the Real World: Students as Architects"
- Mountlake Terrace High School

- "March of the Monarchs"
- Journey North

Follow-Up
Guide participants in these follow-up activities:
- After reflection or small-group discussion, engage the larger group of participants in conversation about what they saw.
Other ideas for viewing questions include:
- "What steps did the students take to work on their project?"
- "What curriculum standards did the students meet through work on their project?"
- "What is the role of the teacher in PBL?"
3. PBL Experts
Ask participants, "What do the experts have to say about the effectiveness of PBL activities?" Then, engage in these activities:
- Introduce participants to Expert Interviews on Edutopia.org. (Here, you will find three pages of interviews with education experts, including Seymour Papert, an authority on children and computing, teacher Eeva Reeder, multiple-intelligences theorist Howard Gardner, and school principal Peggy Bryan.)
- Suggest that small groups (2-4 participants) read and talk about the questions and responses of one expert, or assign particular experts to small groups. (There are several options: focus on national experts such as Howard Gardner, Seymour Papert, and Sylvia Chard, concentrate on individual school personnel (principals and/or teachers and/or students), or assign two or more experts within a category so participants can compare and contrast their comments.
- Suggest that participants conduct external research on their expert to see what else he or she has to say about PBL.
- Have the small groups present their findings to the large group. (Participants may develop a PowerPoint presentation, role-play an interview, or report their findings in other ways.)
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4. Criteria for Good Projects
Ask participants, "What makes a project a good one?" and then follow these steps:
- Suggest that participants think about projects they may have conducted, are thinking about conducting, or have seen others conduct.
- Show the video Mountlake Terrace.
- Ask participants to talk in small groups about what evidence they saw of a good project (for example, the project revolved around a real-world topic; students were involved in project definition by suggesting questions; experts were included).
- Solicit ideas from the whole group, and start a list of criteria for good projects on a flip chart or other media (so criteria can be added as more learning about good projects takes place).
- View another Edutopia video featuring a class at a different grade level (for example, Mott Hall or Newsome Park) and talk about the differences (if any) in criteria for a good project based on the age and experience of the students. Videos about PBL are listed on Edutopia.org's Media page. (In the Search by Topic pull-down menu, select "Project-Based Learning," then click on Submit.)
5. Sylvia Chard's Project Approach
In the "What Is PBL About?" section of this teaching module, the work of education researcher Sylvia Chard is cited. Chard, who defines project learning as "an in-depth investigation of a real-world topic worthy of children's attention and effort," has developed Project Approach, a Web site that explores project learning and suggests good practices. Introduce participants to Chard's work by following these steps:
- Show Project Approach to the class, have them read the About page, and review the site's main topics with them.
- Divide the class into several groups and assign them to look at the Theory, Planning, and Project Development sections and prepare to report to the class about their assigned section. (Each section includes several parts, so suggest that one or more members of each group study each part.)
- To finish this assignment, all small groups should explore a few project examples, based on their grade-level interest.
- Have participants share the most interesting things they learned or saw with the rest of the group.
6. Identifying and Asking Good Questions
The importance of helping students identify and ask good questions is explored in the "What Is PBL About?" section of this teaching module.
From Now On, a Web site published by educational-technology champion Jamie McKenzie, offers a wide array of ideas for good teaching and learning. Key to many of them is a good question -- how to recognize one, how to develop one for students, and how to help students develop their own. To guarantee effective PBL, it is essential that the starting point is a good question. To explore this idea with the class, follow these steps:
- Have participants go to McKenzie's article "The Question is the Answer".
- Assign individuals or small groups to read, review, and discuss different parts of the article.
- Have individuals or small groups share their findings with the class.
- Conclude with a general discussion on what makes a good PBL question.
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7. Examples of Online Collaboration in Projects Among Schools
For a number of years, education scholar Judi Harris and her graduate students studied how teachers were using the Internet. The International Society for Technology in Education published the results in Virtual Architecture, a book written by Harris, who has also maintained a Web site by that name that highlights key findings and provides links to a variety of project examples. To help your students become more familiar with Harris's work, follow these steps:
- Direct participants to visit Harris's Web site and explore the various sections.
- Have participants explore the links to projects found in Curriculum-Based Telecomputing Projects & Resources, according to their interests. (The projects cover a range of ages, grades, subject areas, and purposes.)
- Ask participants to identify three projects they find most interesting and thoroughly explore those projects.
- Have participants describe what they found to the class.
8. More Examples from of PBL in Schools Across the Country
Here are more ideas for using the wealth of resources on Edutopia.org in your class:
1. Show Edutopia.org to the participants.
2. Suggest that they visit the Project-Based Learning At-a-Glance page and explore the articles and videos under the heading "What's Working for K-12 Schools."
3. Have participants divide into small groups to read various articles and view their accompanying videos. Examples such as:
- "It's All Happening at the Zoo School: Innovative Education with Practical Applications"
- "March of the Monarchs"
- "The Indigenous Internet: New Technologies Link Ancient Cultures"
- "Rural Washington Students Connect with the World"
- "A Remarkable Transformation"
- "An MBA for Kids"
- "Loud and Clear: Students Find Their Voice Through Multimedia," and
- "Leapin' Lizards: Students as Data Collectors!"
These examples provide a range of grade levels, subject areas, and types of projects and can be found in The Big List of Project-Based Learning, which includes links to all Edutopia.org resources on the topic.
4. Have participants share what they saw with the larger group.
5. Suggest that participants explore other parts of Edutopia.org, including the Project-Based Learning topic page's Take Action section, which includes ideas for encouraging administrators, businesspeople, parents, policy makers, and teachers to explore and support PBL in schools.
9. Effective Rubrics for PBL
Ask participants: "How will you evaluate student projects?" Being able to evaluate the effectiveness of projects in terms of student learning is key to their success, as well as to whether the time and energy put into developing projects is worthwhile. A number of sites on the Web provide links to rubrics sites. (For example, see Kathy Schrock's Guide for Educators, on DiscoverySchool.com.) To familiarize participants with rubrics, follow these steps:
- Have participants explore the Web sites RubiStar and Project-Based Learning Checklists.
- Ask participants to talk about the pros and cons of the kinds of rubrics that can be developed.
- Direct participants to develop a sample rubric based on their research.
- Have participants share their work with the whole group when they are finished.
- Review Edutopia's Assessment Teaching Module, which explores a variety of forms of assessment, including rubrics, and their use in evaluating PBL activities.
10. Project Template: Develop a Project
Ask participants: "What ideas do you have for a project?" This activity can be divided into a number of sections. For example, before actually creating a project, participants might share their own project ideas:
- Have small groups discuss new project ideas.
- Have participants speculate.
- Have them create, discussing what they will imagine, how they will prepare, and how they will mentor.
Participants might then be asked to brainstorm effective questions. Have them
- share ideas for essential questions.
- reflect on the standards that will be addressed.
- talk about subjects that can be woven into the process.
- create concept maps illustrating the brainstorming process.
- share their concept maps with the rest of the group.
When participants are ready to develop their own projects, have them review Sylvia Chard's Project Development Structure materials. Participants can then begin to plan their projects and fill in the project template. This template should be used as a planning tool, providing formative evaluation as the project progresses. Part of the "Evaluating the Experience" step will be to suggest what might be done differently in the future to make the project more effective.
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SUGGESTED READINGS
Edutopia.org Articles:
- "More Fun Than a Barrel of ... Worms?!"
- Newsome Park

- "Geometry in the Real World: Students as Architects"
- Mountlake Terrace High School

- "March of the Monarchs"
- Journey North

- "Start With the Pyramid: Real-World Issues Motivate Students"
- Project-Based Learning Overview

- "Friendship Through Education: A Sampler of International Web Projects"
- "Measuring What Counts: Memorization Versus Understanding"
- "Laptops for All"
- Mott Hall

- "The Indigenous Internet: New Technologies Link Ancient Cultures"
- First People's Project

- "Research Validates Project-Based Learning"
External Links:
- Questioning.org
- Why Do Project-Based Learning? (Multimedia Project)
- Project-Based Learning: What is it? (4Teachers.org)
- Project-Based Learning (Buck Institute for Education)
- Criteria for Authentic Project-Based Learning (STAR Center)
- The Road Ahead: Project-Based Learning (ISTE)
Recommended Texts:
- Edutopia: Success Stories for Learning in the Digital Age
- The George Lucas Educational Foundation
- Jossey-Bass, A Wiley Company
- Copyright © 2002
- ISBN: 0-7879-6082-9
- Beyond Technology: Questioning, Research, and the Information Literate School
- McKenzie, Jamie
- 1st ed. Copyright © 2000
- ISBN: 0-9674078-2-6
- The Project Approach
- Chard, Sylvia C.
- Book One Copyright © 1998
- ISBN: 0-590-12852-3
- Learning by Heart
- Barth, Roland S.
- 1st ed., Copyright © 2001
- ISBN: 0-7879-5543-4
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SAMPLE SESSION SCHEDULES
The sample schedule provides ideas for one- and two-day sessions. Depending on your resources, videos can be viewed online or on DVD, CD-ROM, or VHS. (Edutopia offers a premade Project-Based Learning DVD featuring eight documentaries.) Ideally, participants should have online access to Internet resources, particularly for the afternoon and second-day sessions.
Getting Started:
PDF files can be viewed on a wide variety of platforms -- both as a browser plug-in or a stand-alone application -- with Adobe's free Acrobat Reader program. Click here to download the latest version of Adobe Reader. To download a free version of the Microsoft PowerPoint Viewer, visit Microsoft's Download Center.
This teaching module is organized into five chapters:
To navigate through this module, see the local navigation on each page at the top right.
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Edutopia also produces books, CD-ROMs, and other materials that can be purchased on Edutopia.org.


High School Math
I came across this site while researching topics for a team assignment for my Master's degree in Technology. I really liked what I saw. Our team had to design a five week course regarding technology and using the best of a budget. The outline provided for doing a workshop or class on project-based learning containing everything needed, and right there online. Thanks for making this information available. And, after reading the information, I became intrigued with pbl and decided to research it further.
Broken link
I'm trying to view the sample workshop schedule posted on your website. The link connects with the Imaging app. and indicates that the document is not supported. Any fixes available?
Thanks.
Staff Comment: Follow up
Hi, Beth -
There are two links on this page that refer to sample schedules. One is an anchor link (that brings you down the page); the second is the link that's in the sentence that reads "The sample schedule provides ideas for one- and two-day sessions."
?
My hunch is you don't have an application that can read a .php document on your computer. TextEdit worked for me. I will ask our tech guy, but that's my hunch initially. I will try to email you the document in the mean time. :)
best,
betty ray
Edutopia.org
Community Manager