Problem-Based Learning (pbl) What it is, Principles, and Examples


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Problem Based Learning

What does PBL do?

  • What does PBL do?
  • PBL simultaneously develops problem solving ` strategies, disciplinary knowledge bases, and skills.
  • How does PBL do it?
  • By placing students in the active role of problem solvers confronted with a (purposefully) ill-structured problem which mirrors real-world problems.

Problem-based learning has as its organizing center the ill-structured problem which...

  • is messy and complex in nature
  • requires inquiry, information-gathering, and reflection
  • is changing and tentative
  • has no simple, fixed, formulaic, "right" solution

PBL Consists of Two Complementary Inter-related Processes

  • PBL Consists of Two Complementary Inter-related Processes
  • Curriculum Design
  • Teachers design an ill-structured problem based on desired curriculum outcomes, learner characteristics, and compelling, problematic situations from the real world
  • Teachers develop a sketch or template of teaching and learning events in anticipation of students' learning needs
  • Teachers investigate the range of resources essential to the problem and arrange for their availability
  • Cognitive Coaching
  • Students actively define problems and construct potential solutions
  • Teachers model, coach, and fade in supporting and making explicit students' learning processes
  • http://www.udel.edu/pbl/
  • Resources for Problem-Based Learning
  • University of Delaware
  • The Power of Problem-Based Learning, A Practical "How To" For Teaching Undergraduate Courses in Any Discipline, edited by Barbara Duch, Susan Gron, and Deborah Allen, Stylus Publishing, LLC (2001), 256 pages
  • San Diego State University, The Learning Tree
  • http://edweb.sdsu.edu/clrit/learningtree/PBL/WhatisPBL.html
  • Features of a PBL Problem
  • introduction,
  • content,
  • learning objectives,
  • resources,
  • expected outcome,
  • guiding questions,
  • assessment exercises,
  • and time frame (Bridges, 1992).
  • The students must be guided to reach both the objectives involved in solving the problem and the objectives related to the process.
  • Creating An Appropriate Problem
    • Choosing a relevant problem,
    • Ensuring that the problem's coverage includes both the big idea and basic skills, and
    • Ensuring the problem's complexity mimics real-life problems.
  • Design Considerations
  • How should PBL be incorporated into the curriculum?
  • What problems should be used and how should they be presented?
  • What are the instructional goals?
  • How should small groups be formed?
  • How much should each problem be pre-structured?
  • How to evaluate the program and the students?
  • What resources should be available?
  • How to prepare students and faculty for PBL? (Bridges, 1992).
  • Guidelines for Problems
  • common situation to serve as a prototype for other situations,
  • significant,
  • prevention is possible,
  • interdisciplinary,
  • cover objectives,
  • task oriented,
  • and complex enough to incorporate prior knowledge (Albanese & Mitchell, 1993).
      • Assessment of problem based learning; students and classes
        • Assessing student achievement
        • Written examinations
        • Practical examinations
        • Concept maps
        • Peer assessment
        • Self assessment
        • Facilitators/tutor assessment
        • Oral Presentations
        • Reports
      • Assessing the value of a problem based learning curriculum
        • Attitudes
        • Basic knowledge
        • Reasoning and problem solving skills
        • Team work
  • Assessment of PBL
  • Barriers to PBL
  • PBL requires more time of students, expects to be responsible and independent learners
  • More time to cover same content (transfer of info via lecture is certainly more efficient—but does learning really occur?)
  • Requires technical and information support
  • Lack of incentives for faculty
  • Disadvantages of Problem Based Learning
  • As with all learning theories, there are advantages and limitations when creating or implementing problem based learning curriculum. These limitations revolve around six topics:
    • the academic achievement of students involved in problem based learning,
    • the amount of time required for implementation,
    • the changing role of the student in the process,
    • the changing role of the teacher in the process,
    • generating appropriate problems, and
    • valid assessment of the program and student learning.
  • How does PBL compare with other instructional approaches?
  • Problem-Based Learning causes a shift in roles...
  • Teacher as coach
  • Student as active problem-solver
  • Problem as initial challenge and motivation
  • Models/coaches/fades in:
    • Asking about thinking
    • Monitoring learning
    • Probing/ challenging students' thinking
    • Keeping students involved
    • Monitoring/ adjusting levels of challenge
    • Managing group dynamics
    • Keeping process moving
  • Student as active problem-solver:
    • Active participant
    • Engaged
    • Constructing meaning
  • Problem as initial challenge and motivation to attention:
    • Ill-structured
    • Appeals to human desire for resolution/ stasis/harmony
    • Sets up need for and context of learning which follows

“Science is knowledge not of things, but of their relations.”

  • “Science is knowledge not of things, but of their relations.”
  • Science is built up of facts, as a house is built up of stones, but an accumulation of facts is no more science than a heap of stones is a house.
  • Henri Poincaré
  • Science and Hypothesis

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