The Enduring Residue Of Project-Based Learning PD
Project based learning is a significant paradigm shift for most teachers and schools that takes sustained work to be successful.
From strategies and project ideas to apps, frameworks, and tips, this is our collection of the best Project-Based Learning resources from TeachThought.
Project based learning is a significant paradigm shift for most teachers and schools that takes sustained work to be successful.
In project-based learning, students and teachers work together to identify content and skills necessary to complete a project.
Consider flipping your teaching so students work on some parts of the project offline and use online time for coaching and support.
Project-based learning needs in the 21st century include socialization, elegant curation, research, pivot points, and other considerations.
One could reasonably cite the complexity of constructivist teaching and learning as a reason to default to more traditional teaching methods.
From place-based education to challenge-based learning, different types of project-based learning symbolize its evolution as a learning model.
The genesis of a great project is the idea itself — we’re providing you with 50 smart ideas for project-based learning in your classroom.
With an authentic audience in PBL, inquiry can help students ask important questions like, ‘Who is our audience and what are their needs?’
Project-based learning is the student-centered process of learning through the design, development, and completion of projects.
From project-planning and design to ideas for projects to video streaming, here are some of the best project-based learning apps.
While we’d love to create a few templates of our own, here five of our favorite Trello boards for teachers we’ve found.
PBL is a service-oriented form of instruction — here are 8 project-based learning switches you can make for 21st century learning.