Skip to main content

Home/ HC English Department/ Group items tagged inquiry based learning

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Tom McHale

How to Reinvent Project Based Learning to Be More Meaningful | MindShift - 0 views

  •  
    "If PBL is to become a powerful, accepted model of instruction in the future, a vocabulary change may be in order - preferably to the term project based inquiry. It's time to not only address the flaws in PBL, but to reinvent it in a way that leads to deeper learning, creative inquiry, and a better fit with a collaborative world in which doing and knowing are one thing. Here are thoughts about five areas in which PBL needs to move forward."
Tom McHale

How to Reinvent Project Based Learning to Be More Meaningful | PROJECT BASED LEARNING |... - 0 views

  •  
    "If PBL is to become a powerful, accepted model of instruction in the future, a vocabulary change may be in order - preferably to the term project based inquiry. It's time to not only address the flaws in PBL, but to reinvent it in a way that leads to deeper learning, creative inquiry, and a better fit with a collaborative world in which doing and knowing are one thing. Here are thoughts about five areas in which PBL needs to move forward."
Brendan McIsaac

Should I teach problem-, project-, or inquiry-based learning? SmartBlogs - 1 views

  •  
    Simple descriptors of project-problem based learning and inquiry
Tom McHale

Five-Minute Film Festival: Genius Hour | Edutopia - 0 views

  •  
    "Since it's not often possible for teachers to sacrifice an entire day of schooling to allow for individual creative pursuits, the idea has been reinterpreted in many schools as a "Genius Hour," where students get one hour per day or week to focus on a project of their choice. The practice combines well with classroom pedagogies such as project-based learning and inquiry-based learning. To find out more about what 20 percent time is and how to use it, watch the playlist below!"
Tom McHale

How Genius Hour Can Incite Students' Civic Engagement - 0 views

  •  
    "It's especially powerful because students identify the topics and carry out their own explorations, rather than teachers determining everything in advance. However: while the effort usually concludes with students presenting their learning through videos, blog posts, multi-media presentations, demonstrations, genius hour advocates often conceive these final outcomes primarily as students "showing what they've learned," essentially to evaluate the work and give it a grade. There's certainly nothing wrong with this approach, and teachers and students in many schools enjoy the energy, creativity, and learning that genius hour generates. But there's also so much more waiting to be unleashed if the products involve a larger purpose that just a grade. What's especially valuable is the potential of geniur hour as a gateway to student civic involvement."
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page