Free Tools Aim to Help Teachers Implement PBL in the Classroom

An organization that promotes project-based learning has launched a free set of "idea cards" for teachers to help them implement PBL in their classrooms. The Buck Institute for Education's new PBLWorks features 63 downloadable projects for K-12 in English language arts, math, science, social studies, world languages, fine arts, health and physical education and other STEM topics. The organization said it expected to add new cards to the collection over the year.

Each project card includes a "driving question," a project description, the learning standards the project addresses, the anticipated outcomes and reflection questions to help educators bring the learning to life in their own settings.

Among the projects, which have been tried out in classrooms before being published on the site, are these:

  • "Community Heroes," a social studies project for grades K-2 that poses the question, "What makes someone a community hero?" Students research and create portraits of community heroes that are assembled into a gallery for public display.
  • "The Scoop on Our Stuff," an ELA project for grades 11-12 that asks, "What is the true cost of the things we buy?" Students research the origin of popular brand name products and the related labor, environmental and political facets of manufacturing and distributing these products. They turn their research into expose-style articles to share.
  • "Crash Course!" a physics/engineering project for grades 9-12 that wonders, "How do we protect the things and people we care about from collisions?" Students identify possible collision scenarios and then design and build protective solutions. The work includes conferring with experts to gather feedback on their product designs. Work includes writing a design brief for a manufacturer that includes an analysis of the problem (with the math).

"By offering ideas for high quality projects, we hope to help and inspire teachers to get started with or grow their use of PBL in the classroom," said Bob Lenz, executive director of PBLWorks, in a statement. "Each project represents an authentic challenge, and student work is structured to promote academic mastery and development of 21st century success skills such as critical thinking and teamwork."

The library can be accessed with site registration on the PBLWorks website.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • magnifying glass with AI icon in the center

    Google Releases Learning-Themed AI Mode Features for Search

    Ahead of back-to-school season, Google has introduced new AI Mode features in Search, including image and PDF queries on desktop, a Canvas tool for planning, real-time help with Search Live, and Lens integration in Chrome.

  • conceptual graph of rising AI adoption

    AI Adoption Rising, but Trust Gap Limits Impact

    A recent global study by IDC and SAS found that while the adoption of artificial intelligence continues to expand rapidly across industries, a misalignment between perceived trust in AI systems and their actual trustworthiness is limiting business returns.

  • human profile with a circuit-board brain next to an open book

    Pilot Program Fosters AI Literacy in Underserved Youth

    A pilot co-led by Operation HOPE and Georgia State University is working to build technical, entrepreneurial, and financial-literacy skills in Atlanta-area youth to help them thrive in the AI-powered workforce.

  • school building with a large five-column calendar grid in the background

    ParentSquare Launches New Attendance Module

    Family engagement platform ParentSquare has introduced ParentSquare Attendance Plus, a new solution designed to help reduce chronic absenteeism with timely communication.