Corin
Justa
February
15, 2013
Reading
Reflection #4:
1.
The potential pitfalls of project design
include:
a. Long
activities that are short on learning outcome, meaning that the project may be
busy or too long that it does not provide the level of recall and understanding
because of its lengthiness.
b. Technology
layered over traditional practice, where students research topics online, but
present their knowledge using their traditional presentations with things such
as PowerPoint.
c. Trivial
thematic units that may lack the big picture of many other aspects that may
correlate with the topic being studied.
d. Overly
scripted with many, many words, which can cause students and teachers to go through
many steps to find the key things they are searching for and be led to a dead
end.
2.
Some features of a good project include
features such as:
a. Being
loosely designed with the possibility of different learning paths.
b. Being
generative, causing students to construct meaning.
c. Centering
on a driving question or are otherwise structured for inquiry.
d. Capturing
student interest through complex and compelling real-life or stimulated experiences.
e. Reaching
beyond school to involve others.
f. Having
students working as inquiring experts might
g. have
students learn by doing
3.
Project ideas come from:
a. new
stories
b. contemporary
issues
c. student
questions or interests
d. a
classroom irritant put to educational use
e. a
“mash up” of a great idea or a new tool
f. a
tried or true project with potential for more meaningful, expressive learning
g. project
plans developed by and for other teachers
4.
The steps to design a project include
revisiting the framework by doing such things as making a final list of
learning objectives for core subjects and allied disciplines. It is important
to decide on what specific skills should be addressed and to identify the
learning dispositions. With these skills, teachers can establish evidence of
understanding among their students, identify what they will acquire and plan
the project experience.
5.
Discussion in this chapter relate to our
group topic by providing examples of what does and does not work when trying to
incorporate project based learning into our lesson. With this new knowledge of
good project features and pitfalls, we can stay clear of certain teaching
styles that may defect our topic by avoiding them and try to incorporate the successful
ones to become efficient in our ways of teaching.
I agree that this chapter is very relevant when it comes to being useful in our group project. Reading about potential pitfalls of project base learning and what makes a good project will not only help us with our lesson plans for class but also when we pursue our teaching career. I also agree that before making a lesson plan, its important to go over what learning objectives you are teaching to make sure you incorporate them into your lesson plans.
ReplyDeleteI like that you could really use this chapter in your group project and it seems you learned a lot from reading the chapter. It seems to have taught you some pro and cons of maybe what you were planning before.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the layout of this post. I think this is a simple way to understand the concepts found in this chapter, and would help readers to remember the information
ReplyDelete