Type
- Articles (23)
- Product Toolkit (12)
- PBL Spotlights (10)
- Teaching Practice Videos (8)
- Blog (639)
- Project Videos (130)
- Other Videos (23)
- Planning Tools (31)
- Rubrics (6)
- Strategy Guides (26) X
- Student Handouts (11) X
- (Book) (1)
- (Archived Webinar) (39)
- (Online Tool) (7) X
- (Document) (58)
- (Research) (21)
- (Website) (47)
- (Archived Google Hangout) (83)
- (Curriculum Unit) (13)
44 Results
As students work together on projects, they learn valuable skills for collaborating, managing group dynamics and conflict, and building on one another’s strengths.
Whether your students exhibit their work products during the course of the project, at the end, or both, you’ll want to have many sets of eyes on their public products. An audience feedback form is a tool used to actively engage the audience at an exhibition.
A rubric is more than a tool to assess final products. It is a tool that should be leveraged throughout the project to support multiple kinds of learning opportunities for your students. This guide offers strategies for using rubrics to aid learning at each phase of a project.
Effective teams require us to think carefully about the kind of work students will be doing throughout the project. What outcomes are most important? How can we utilize teams so students effectively reach those outcomes?
The need to know questions that initiated inquiry at the beginning of the project are central to students’ learning as they follow the project path. Need to know questions are revisited throughout the project in order to track learning and support sustained inquiry.
Create & sustain district-wide PBL initiatives at all levels of the organization.
Learn how to bring coherence to PBL practices across grade levels and subject areas.
Learn how to design, assess, and manage projects that engage and motivate students.
These projects are meant to inspire your own ideas or may be adapted to fit classroom needs.
Plan your project online - and digitally share it with others - by summarizing its key pieces.
This checklist helps teachers prepare for project presentations before they start.
May be filled in by project team members to record agreements about how they will work together.
This form may be used by students to track progress on a project and have them report on what they individually accomplished on a particular day or week.
This form may be used during a project to have students report on what their team accomplished on a particular day or week.
For students preparing for a Project-Based World
This document helps students organize their presentations with a specific audience in mind.
This documents helps capture thoughtful feedback from the audience for student presentations.
This document helps a team keep track of project tasks, who is responsible for them, and by when.