Learning in order to solve
PBL is any learning environment in which the problem drives the learning. The problem is presented first.
In PBL, students discover they need to learn some new knowledge before they can solve the problem. Examples include:
- Research projects
- Engineering design projects (that are more than a synthesis of previously learned knowledge)
How PBL works
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A resource for teachers and those in instructional development
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Problem-based learning: helping your students gain the most from PBL
A resource for teachers -
Problem-based learning: how to gain the most from PBL
A resource for students
The traditional and well-known “case approach”, which is popular with business schools, may or may not be problem-based learning. Often the case is used to integrate previously-learned knowledge and would not be, according to this definition, problem-based learning.
Not without explicit interventions on the part of the teacher. PBL offers an opportunity to develop the skills.
Change is not easy. This change asks teachers to change their role from the source of all knowledge to being the coach and facilitator of that knowledge.
The learning becomes student-centred.