scaffolding teacher implementation of pbls

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+ Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs Adams 12 Five Star Schools

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Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs. Adams 12 Five Star Schools. Supporting Teacher Change. Collaboration Classroom enactment Reflection of teacher learning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

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Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

Adams 12 Five Star Schools

Page 2: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Supporting Teacher Change

CollaborationClassroom enactmentReflection of teacher learning

“Teachers may gravitate toward those activities that are most familiar, rather than those that are most productive for learning.”

Page 3: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Teachers’ PBL planning efforts

Key Tasks During Planning PhaseDesigning or Planning Problem Scenario (the “driving question”)

Gathering relevant resourcesCreating student ownership in the identified problem

Page 4: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Identifying “The Driving Question”

A good driving question is defined as one that is meaningful to students, includes relevant content, involves authentic problem solving, lends itself to collaboration, and is broad enough to permit students to develop their own questions & investigations. (Lehman, Ertmer, Keck, & Steele, 2001)

Page 5: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Identifying “The Driving Question”

Possible SourcesNewspaper, journal articles, radio broadcasts, recent legal cases, current community issues, ongoing policy debates, film plots, curriculum guides, units of study.

Page 6: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Identifying “The Driving Question”

Questions to ask yourself

Would my students experience significant content learning by working on this situation?

Would the content fit my curricular needs?

Is the content appropriate for my students?

Can a PBL be built around this situation?

Page 7: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Locating & Gathering Resources

If there are limited resources available, or if available resources are beyond students’ reading or comprehension levels, the question, no matter how authentic or interesting, will not inspire deep thinking.

Page 8: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Locating & Gathering Resources

The lack of prepared materials for classroom instruction creates barriers to the implementation of PBL.

Begin the planning process by visualizing the activities that will take place during the unit, and then identify resources students will need at specific times.

Page 9: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Locating & Gathering Resources

For example, remind your students that research is about finding answers to questions. Teach students to use note cards in a purposeful, systematic manner. Have students use a question as a header that the subsequent notes answer. This will help focus their research and organize their facts.

Page 10: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Locating & Gathering Resources

Teachers need to determine if technology is truly integral to the students’ work or whether its supplemental. Plans need to be made regarding how the resources will be managed and shared by the students as well as how activities will be completed if technology is not accessible when needed.

Page 11: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Student ownership in the problem

Experienced PBL teachers recommend getting students thinking about the problem before the unit begins. Plant seeds of curiosity weeks in advance.

Page 12: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Student ownership in the problem

Assign student roles

Use concrete activities (videos, field trips, guest speakers)

The greater students’ involvement in an issue, the greater their investment in its solution and the harder they will work

Page 13: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Student ownership in the problem

Ease students into their roles and responsibilities.

Provide prompts to help students think about the problem.

Encourage students to seek out sub-issues embedded within the overarching problem.

Page 14: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

+Student ownership in the problem

Create a culture of collaboration and interdependence.

Provide opportunities for students to self-assess and reflect on their learning.Daily goal sheetsProblem logsCornell note reflections

Page 15: Scaffolding Teacher Implementation of PBLs

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