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Problem-Based Learning in Professional Education Doris R. Brodeur Massachusetts Institute of Technology AAHE - April 2004.

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Presentation on theme: "Problem-Based Learning in Professional Education Doris R. Brodeur Massachusetts Institute of Technology AAHE - April 2004."— Presentation transcript:

1 Problem-Based Learning in Professional Education Doris R. Brodeur Massachusetts Institute of Technology dbrodeur@mit.edu AAHE - April 2004

2 Professional Education Architecture Medicine and Health Care LawEngineering Teaching Business

3 Today’s Objectives Apply knowledge of PBL to your own professional programs Share ideas and experiences of PBL with other participants

4 Outline l Key features of PBL l Relevance to conference theme l Learning theories that underlie PBL l Design of PBL experiences l Assessment of PBL experiences

5 P BL: Problem? Project? Performance? Problem- Based Learning Project- Based Learning Performance- Based Learning

6 Student-centered and self-directed The Water Bike Project at The Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm

7 Organized around real-world problems The SPHERES Project at MIT

8 Focused on authentic skills

9 Collaborative

10 With faculty as facilitators Workshop at Queen’s University, Belfast

11 Pair-and-Share l Your name, affiliation, and professional area l Experience with PBL (is it problem, project, or performance?) l Questions about PBL

12 Outline l Key features of PBL l Relevance to conference theme l Learning theories that underlie PBL l Design of PBL experiences l Assessment of PBL experiences

13 Democratic Transformations l Opportunities for students to organize their own learning l Increased access to multiple sources of information l Changing roles for faculty l Collaboration across disciplines, cultures, and countries

14 Outline l Relevance to conference theme l Key features of PBL l Learning theories that underlie PBL l Design of PBL experiences l Assessment of PBL experiences

15 Constructivism l What is learned is a function of the content, context, activity of the learner, and goals of the learner l Students build their own internal frameworks of knowledge upon which they “attach” new ideas l Cognitive conflict is the stimulus for learning

16 Metacognition l Knowing about knowing affects learning l Students are encouraged to think critically and monitor their understanding l Students reflect not only on what they know, but on how they know it

17 Social Negotiation l Social and cultural factors affect learning l Knowledge evolves through social negotiation and evaluation of the viability of individual understandings l Collaboration promotes PBL

18 Outline l Relevance to conference theme l Key features of PBL l Learning theories that underlie PBL l Design of PBL experiences l Assessment of PBL experiences

19 Pair-and-Share l Describe a sample problem in your area l List the key intended learning outcomes for this PBL experience l Describe the learning environment

20 Designing Problems (1) l Identify problems that raise the concepts and principles relevant to the content domain l Anchor all learning activities to a larger task or problem l Support the learner in developing ownership for the overall problem or task

21 Designing Problems (2) l Design an authentic task, i.e., one in which the thinking required is consistent with the thinking in the environment for which the learner is preparing l Design the learning environment to support and challenge the learner’s thinking l Design the task and environment to reflect the complexity of the environment in which learners will later function

22 Designing Problems (3) l Encourage testing ideas against alternative views and alternative contexts l Set realistic and assessable parameters l Provide opportunities for reflection on both the content learned and the learning process

23 Sequencing PBL Experiences l The learning sequence is not necessarily the same as the sequence of the process in the professional environment l Sequence for levels of complexity in problem structure, type of solution, number of people required, length of time

24 Level of Complexity #1 l Structured problem l Known solution l Individual or group solution l Same problem for all students l Short time frame

25 Level of Complexity #2 l Structured problem l Known solution l Team solution l Same problem for all teams l Short time frame Autonomous Robots at MIT

26 Level of Complexity #3 l Complex problem l Solution can be known or unknown l Team solution l Different problem for each team l Several weeks or months Third-Year Electronics Project at Linkoping University

27 Level of Complexity #4 l Complex problem l Unknown solution l Team solution l Single problem solved by multiple sub-teams l More than one term long ARGOS Project at MIT

28 Pair-and-Share l Discuss the levels of complexity and sequencing of PBL experiences in your professional programs

29 Outline l Relevance to conference theme l Key features of PBL l Learning theories that underlie PBL l Design of PBL experiences l Assessment of PBL experiences

30 Intended Learning Outcomes l Content knowledge l Reasoning and problem solving l Oral and written communication l Teamwork and collaboration l Project management l Self-directed learning

31 Assessment Methods Case Study Analysis Observation with Rating Scale Self- Assessment with Rating Scale Journals and Portfolios Product Review with Rating Scale Oral Questions and Interviews Intended Learning Outcomes

32 Matching Assessment With Outcomes

33 Project Assessment l Product Review Built to specification Time l Team Collaboration l Written Documentation l Reflective Journal Formula Student Project at Chalmers Institute of Technology, Gothenberg

34 Project Assessment l Product Review Built to specification Course completion Time Number of trials l Team Collaboration l Articulation of robot logic

35 Summary l Key features of PBL l Learning theories that underlie PBL l Design of PBL experiences l Assessment of PBL experiences l QUESTIONS?


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