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  • >>Narrator, old footage: How will today's children function

  • in a dangerous world?

  • What means will they use to carve the future?

  • Will they be equipped to find the answers to tomorrow's problems?

  • >>Teacher: When you think about traditional learning you think

  • of a student sitting in a classroom and being talked at.

  • >>Teacher, old footage: Now I imagine a lot of you are still thinking...

  • >>Teacher: They are supposed to be a sponge.

  • The teacher tells them information and they suck it up.

  • That's not the real world.

  • Having them actively engaged learning about things in their community

  • and doing projects that they care about is giving them that ownership

  • of their learning, it's making them life-long learners,

  • it's giving them the critical thinking and problem-solving skills

  • that they need as soon as they walk

  • out of your classroom into the real world.

  • >>Peggy Ertmer: So there are a lot of different ways to approach PBL,

  • a lot of different ways to implement it, but really it all boils

  • down to five essential keys: real-world connection,

  • core to learning, structured collaboration, student driven,

  • and multifaceted assessment.

  • The first key component of PBL is real-world connections,

  • and really what this entails is having an authentic problem

  • that drives the curriculum.

  • So students are given this question, for example, "What's in our water

  • and how did it get there?"

  • And then the students choose different paths

  • to explore that question.

  • >>Student: One of the problems in the ocean is that with the higher amount

  • of CO2 calcifying organisms are decreasing and we're testing

  • to see how well life in the ocean lives without calcifying organisms.

  • >>Tom Duenwald: When the students know that what they're doing

  • in the classroom has an audience outside the classroom it really helps

  • them deepen their thinking on it and I think that is pretty authentic

  • in terms of what the future work world holds.

  • >>Student: -- four by eight feet.

  • >>Peggy Ertmer: So the second commonality is the PBL unit provides

  • academic rigor.

  • This is not something that teachers would add at the end of a unit

  • because they learned all the content they're supposed to learn already

  • and so this, you know, the fluff that they can do at the end.

  • This is the unit, this is the way that they learn the content.

  • >>Teacher: So what's your standards you're gonna be covering?

  • >>Teacher: We're gonna do 5a, which is analyzing scenes,

  • and this is huge in this book.

  • >>Steven Zipkes: When you can show

  • that you're incorporating the standards built in these projects

  • that aren't fluff a lot of eyes and ears open,

  • because people are hungry for that.

  • >>Peggy Ertmer: Structured collaboration refers

  • to allowing the students to work together,

  • but giving them a structure within which to work.

  • >>David: Our project was to create a aquaponics system

  • and we had several people working on it.

  • In my case I was kind of the team leader.

  • Two members of my group, who were kind of just like the thinkers

  • that would think, "What if we could include this?"

  • And once those two came up with the ideas,

  • it would go through another person who was kind of like the designer

  • to figure out, "Oh, how would we make it?"

  • And then it would kind of go up to me and say--

  • and I would kinda be like the final decider--

  • >>Sheela Webster: We would never put four kids together

  • at a table and say, "Here's a task.

  • Get it done during this time period."

  • It's very carefully scaffolded.

  • >>Peggy Ertmer: There's an interesting shift in roles

  • that happens in a PBL unit.

  • The teacher becomes more of a facilitator

  • and the students take more control.

  • >>Teacher: You guys are the Red Cross responders.

  • You already looked at news broadcasts.

  • >>Yes.

  • >>Teacher: And you took down some notices.

  • You need to take all of this and you need to bring it together.

  • >>Student: So I have to write down the aspects of the news broadcast?

  • >>Teacher: You got it.

  • Exactly. So Kassim's got it.

  • Kassim can give you some ideas on how to start.

  • >>Peggy Ertmer: But as the facilitator the teacher needs

  • to be able to ask good questions.

  • She needs to re-direct if necessary, you know, give hints but not answers.

  • And that's really an interesting role for teachers to learn how to do.

  • Multifaceted assessment refers

  • to assessment being integrated throughout the entire PBL unit.

  • >>Lisa Zeller: I do a lot of formative assessments.

  • It's not a test at the end of the week or the end of the unit.

  • You're doing a lot of small check-ins with the students to see

  • where they're at and to see that they're growing along.

  • I think it's really important to also make sure

  • that the students are assessing themselves.

  • >>Sheela Webster: It's a process that we are really trying

  • to bring back again to the student so that kids are part

  • of the assessment process and that assessment is just not being done

  • to them.

  • >>Peggy Ertmer: -- are students who would blossom under this approach.

  • They learn that they have voice and choice and teachers would probably

  • in the end find it easier and more fulfilling

  • and we would probably have a whole lot less burnout.

  • I mean this is really an exciting way of teaching.

  • >>Steven Zipkes: What we've done

  • for the last hundred years direct teaching for some students it works,

  • but for most students it doesn't.

  • So for us project-based instruction is a way

  • that we can reach all students and get them engaged.

  • >>Student: Right now my favorite project is called

  • "Create Your Own Project".

  • >>My favorite project this year was in chemistry and what it was

  • about we were using chemistry and reactions to create a soda.

  • >>It's a video production class and we're making a kids' show.

  • We're calling it "The Dojo Show".

  • >>We're learning about spatial diffusion,

  • Black Death, the Columbian exchange--

  • >>Reactions like double replacement, combustion, things like that.

  • >>We're basically the teachers in this so we're gonna create a rubric,

  • our group contracts, and we're gonna launch this project to our class.

  • >>We're learning how to collaborate

  • and also work towards a creative goal.

  • It helps us get into that creative mindset

  • that really is something that's hard to find in any other high school.

>>Narrator, old footage: How will today's children function

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