Learning to Learn: Preparing Teachers and
Students for Problem-Based Learning
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Improvement which is part of the Department of Education.
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Problem-based learning (PBL) is an educational approach that challenges
students to "learn to learn". Students work cooperatively in groups to
seek solutions to real-world problems and more importantly, to develop
skills to become self-directed learners. Here, the goal of problem-based
learning is viewed as learning for capability rather than learning for the
sake of acquiring knowledge. PBL is unique in its integral emphasis on
core content along with problem solving (Gallagher, 1997). Within the
context of reading in the PBL classroom, learning thus becomes much more
than the process of mere knowledge seeking. Students develop critical
thinking abilities by constantly relating what they read to what they want
to do with the information. They question the writer's assumptions and
analyze information presented, all within the context of finding answers
to "What can I do with this information?" and "What does understanding
this mean to me?" This digest discusses some of the challenges in learning
that students face, and identifies web resources that teachers can use to
support student learning.
CHALLENGES IN PBL IMPLEMENTATION
PBL requires students to take on active learning strategies and adopt a
self-directed learning disposition. Some students find it difficult to
cope when asked to transform into active critical thinkers. PBL teachers
may also face difficulty as they prepare to facilitate discussion, provide
coaching, challenge student thinking and manage group work. Below are some
challenges for PBL classrooms.
Limited experience in group work management. Group work is integral to
PBL and students need to learn how to make optimal use of their time and
resources while working in groups. Functioning effectively in groups
involves knowing how to organize the work, distribute responsibility,
break up complex tasks, and provide useful feedback on work that is done.
Teachers can contribute by helping students better understand the merits
of group work.
Lack of familiarity with inquiry learning. When faced with problem
tasks, students often find it difficult to identify the critical issues
and to generate coherent research designs. They are often unclear about
how they can relate what they are currently reading to what they already
know. They are also unfamiliar with different stages of the inquiry
process, such as generating hypotheses, providing logical arguments, and
transforming data into a product. When students have an appropriate
learning context and the need to seek the necessary information, they also
see how things finally "come together". This is an aspect of critical
reading that can be promoted within the framework of problem-based
learning.
Inadequate feedback on learning and assessment. Giving feedback to
students is integral to improving student learning. Barron et al. (1998)
suggest that teachers can better guide and monitor projects by
incorporating formative self-reflections by students, by creating a
classroom culture that supports frequent feedback and assessment, and by
finding ways for students to compare their work with others. Teachers can
make students take their work seriously by incorporating opportunities
that involve external audiences in assessing students' performance.
SCAFFOLDING FOR PBL SUCCESS
In the model of cognitive apprenticeship, developed by Collins, Brown
and Newman (1987), scaffolding is described as a means of coaching
students to the extent that they can perform intellectual tasks on their
own. Success with PBL largely depends on whether students have been
sufficiently prepared to take on certain new roles, such as those of
inquiry seekers and collaborative team players in the classroom (Boud &
Feletti, 1997). In a PBL classroom, for example, the teacher gauges the
difference between what activities students can do on their own and what
they need to learn to do to solve the problem. Then the teacher designs
activities which offer just enough of a scaffold for students to overcome
this gap of knowledge and skills (Greening, 1998). Effective scaffolding
includes activities that help students develop the right mindset, engage
students with the problem, divide activities into manageable tasks, and
direct students' attention to essential aspects of the learning goals. The
effectiveness of PBL depends to a large degree on the scaffolding provided
by teachers to students.
LEARNING TO LEARN: COOPERATIVE LEARNING SKILLS
Central to the effectiveness of PBL is the ability of students to work
together to solve problems (Peterson, 1997). Teachers can encourage more
beneficial and meaningful group work by prompting students to pool talents
and resources and by guiding them to resolve conflicts while working
together. Relevant web resources to enhance this skill building include:
* Essential Elements of Cooperative Learning in the Classroom http://www.ed.gov/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed370881.html
* Cooperative and Collaborative Learning: Implementation http://www.thirteen.org/wnetschool/concept2class/month5/implementati
on.html
* Collaborative Learning: Why Groups Fail http://www.wcer.wisc.edu/nise/cl1/CL/moreinfo/MI3J.htm
LEARNING TO LEARN: INQUIRY SKILLS
In PBL, students must seek and evaluate the information they acquire
related to the problem they are given to solve. Activities that involve
inquiry learning include problem framing, data gathering, divergent
thinking or idea generation, evaluating alternatives, and applying a
solution to the problem (Hmelo & Ferrari, 1997). Web resources on inquiry
activities are:
* Critical Thinking in Reading http://www.yorku.ca/cdc/lsp/read/read4.htm
* A Questioning Toolkit http://fromnowon.org/nov97/toolkit.html
* Higher-Order Thinking Strategies for the Classroom http://members.aol.com/MattT10574/HigherOrderLiteracy.htm
* Promoting Thinking in Classroom Learning: A Self-Assessment Scale for
Teachers (refer to page 20) http://www.breakthroughs.co.nz/bt/Obrien.pdf
LEARNING TO LEARN: REFLECTION SKILLS
Reflection involves focused thinking about learning during the learning
process. However, students often get caught up in completing a task and do
not take time to reflect. Students learn from two kinds of reflection
activities. The first focuses on the content, with students asking
questions such as "What do I know now, and how can I use this information
to meet the project's goal?" The second is reflection on the learning
process, wherein is asked such questions as "How am I doing as a learner
in this environment - as a self directed learner, as a problem solver, and
as a collaborator? What are my strengths and weaknesses? How can I
improve?" Relevant web resources to enhance student reflection include:
* Developing Metacognition http://www.ed.gov/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed327218.html
* Metacognition http://chiron.valdosta.edu/whuitt/col/cogsys/metacogn.html
LEARNING TO LEARN: ASSESSMENT
One problem in PBL is that while students are constantly encouraged to
be engaged in the learning process, assessment of student learning is
often focused instead on the final learning product. PBL teachers need to
better understand meaningful ways of assessing student work to motivate
learning. The following web resources provide information that clarifies a
variety of topics related to assessment for PBL:
* Energizing Teacher Education and Professional Development with
Problem-Based Learning http://www.ascd.org/readingroom/books/levin01book.html
* Assessing Student Work with Project-Based Learning
http://pblmm.k12.ca.us/PBLGuide/AssessPBL.html
* Project Based Learning: Involving Students in Checklist Creation
(Also, check out the link to the Ontario Teachers' Staff Room for a rubric
creation resource) http://www.4teachers.org/projectbased/students.shtml
CONCLUSION
PBL teachers constantly face challenges of encouraging students to go
beyond the given information, to reflect on learning, and to actively
consider how their knowledge might apply in novel contexts. Students are
encouraged to constantly discover and try new ways of learning. To
facilitate these goals, teachers and students need to be provided with
appropriate and accessible pedagogical tools and support.
As students develop more self-directed learning strategies, teachers
can provide less scaffolding support. Below are some resources that can
help teachers gain a better understanding of PBL and provide ways of
supporting student learning at different levels.
* PBL Projects by the ERIC Clearinghouse on Educational Management,
complete with Instructor and Student Editions http://eric.uoregon.edu/publications/pub_pbl.html
* How to Use Problem-Based Learning in the Classroom http://www.ascd.org/readingroom/books/delisle97book.html
* Problem Based Learning in Language Instruction: A Constructivist
Method http://www.indiana.edu/~eric_rec/ieo/digests/d132.html
* Adelaide University: LEAP into Problem-Based Learning http://www.acue.adelaide.edu.au/leap/leapinto/pbl/
REFERENCES
Barron B., Schwartz D., Vye N., Moore A., Petrosino A., Zech L.,
Bransford J., and The Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt.
(1998). Doing with understanding: Lessons from research on problem and
project-based learning. The Journal of the Learning Sciences, 7, 271-311.
[EJ 584 623]
Boud, D. & Feletti, G. (Eds.) (1997) The challenge of Problem-Based
Learning. 2nd Edition. [ED 415 220]
Collins A., Brown J. S., and Newman S. (1987). Cognitive
apprenticeship: Teaching the crafts of reading, writing, and mathematics.
Technical Report No. 403. [ED 284 181]
Gallagher, S. A. (1997). Problem-Based Learning: Where did it come
from, what does it do, and where is it going? Journal for the Education of
the Gifted, 20, 4, pp. 332-62. [EJ 553 973]
Greening, T. (1998). Scaffolding for success in PBL. Med Educ Online
[serial online] 3,4. Available http://www.Med-Ed-Online.org.
Hmelo, C. E. & Ferrari, M. (1997). The problem-based learning tutorial:
Cultivating higher order thinking skills. Journal for the Education of the
Gifted, 20, 4, pp.401-422. [EJ 553 976]
Peterson, M. (1997). Skills to enhance Problem-based Learning. Med Educ
Online [serial online] 2, 3. Available http://www.Med-Ed-Online.org.
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Digest #163 is EDO-CS-01-04 and was published in October 2001 by the
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Government.
Title: Learning To Learn: Preparing Teachers and Students for
Problem-Based Learning. ERIC Digest.
Note: ERIC Digest D163.
Document Type: Information Analyses---ERIC Information Analysis
Products (IAPs) (071); Information Analyses---ERIC Digests (Selected) in
Full Text (073);
Available From: ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading, English, and
Communication, Indiana University, 2805 E. 10th Street, Suite 140,
Bloomington, IN 47408-2698. Tel: 800-759-4723 (Toll Free). For full text:
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Descriptors: Active Learning, Cooperative Learning, Critical
Thinking, Higher Education, Problem Based Learning, Scaffolding (Teaching
Technique), Secondary Education, Thinking Skills
Identifiers: ERIC Digests, Self Direction
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