BIE Essential Project Design Elements
BIE Essential Project Design Elements
BIE Essential Project Design Elements
Sustained Inquiry
Authenticity
Reflection on the
content knowledge and
understanding gained helps
students solidify what they
have learned and think about
how it might apply elsewhere,
beyond the project.
Reflection
John Dewey, whose ideas continue to inform
our thinking about PBL, wrote, We do not learn
from experience. We learn from reflecting on
experience. Throughout a project, students
and the teacher should reflect on what theyre
learning, how theyre learning, and why theyre
learning. Reflection can occur informally, as part
of classroom culture and dialogue, but should also
be an explicit part of project journals, scheduled
formative assessment, discussions at project
checkpoints, and public presentations of student
work. Reflection on the content knowledge and
understanding gained helps students solidify
what they have learned and think about how
it might apply elsewhere, beyond the project.
Reflection on success skill development helps
students internalize what the skills mean and set
goals for further growth. Reflection on the project
itself how it was designed and implemented
helps students decide how they might approach
their next project, and helps teachers improve the
quality of their PBL practice.
Public Product
There are three major reasons for creating a public
product in Gold Standard PBL and note that a
product can be a tangible thing, or it can be a
presentation of a solution to a problem or answer
to a driving question. First, like authenticity, a
public product adds greatly to PBLs motivating
power and encourages high-quality work. Think
of what often happens when students make
presentations to their classmates and teacher. The
stakes are not high, so they may slack off, not take
it seriously, and not care as much about the quality
of their work. But when students have to present
or display their work to an audience beyond the
classroom, the performance bar raises, since no
one wants to look bad in public. A certain degree of
anxiety can be a healthy motivator. But too much
anxiety can of course detract from performance
the trick is to find the sweet spot, not the sweat
spot so its important that students are well
prepared to make their work public.
Adapted from Setting the Standard for Project Based Learning: A Proven Approach to Rigorous Classroom
Instruction, by John Larmer, John Mergendoller, Suzie Boss (ASCD 2015).