Hmelo-Silver, C.E. 2004. Problem-Based Learning: What and
How Do Students Learn?. Educational Psychology Review, Vol. 16, No. 3, 235-266.
"Problem-based approaches to learning have a long
history of advocating experience-based education. Psychological research and
theory suggests that by having students learn through the experience of solving
problems, they can learn both content and thinking strategies. Problem-based
learning (PBL) is an instructional method in which students learn through
facilitated problem solving. In PBL, student learning centers on a complex
problem that does not have a single correct answer. Students work in
collaborative groups to identify what they need to learn in order to solve a
problem. They engage in self-directed learning (SDL) and then apply their new
knowledge to the problem and reflect on what they learned and the effectiveness
of the strategies employed. The teacher acts to facilitate the learning process
rather than to provide knowledge. The goals of PBL include helping students
develop 1) flexible knowledge, 2) effective problem-solving skills, 3) SDL
skills, 4) effective collaboration skills, and 5) intrinsic motivation. This
article discusses the nature of learning in PBL and examines the empirical
evidence supporting it. There is considerable research on the first 3 goals of
PBL but little on the last 2. Moreover, minimal research has been conducted
outside medical and gifted education. Understanding how these goals are
achieved with less skilled learners is an important part of a research agenda
for PBL. The evidence suggests that PBL is an instructional approach that
offers the potential to help students develop flexible understanding and
lifelong learning skills.“ Silver, p.235
Summary and Analysis
History Of Problem
Based Learning
PBL (Problem Based Learning) is part of a history of
approaches that stress the importance of meaningful, experiential
learning. In PBL students learn by solving
problems and reflecting on their learning.
It has a dual emphasis on helping learners develop strategies and
construct knowledge,
At the time of the article publication (2004) the author
noted that a discussion of PBL was timely because of the flexible thinking,
life long learning inherent in the approach.
Educators appreciate the approaches emphasis on active transferable
learning."
PBL and Other
Experiential Approaches
PBL is part of a family of approaches that includes Anchored
Learning and Problem based Learning.
PBL is focused, experiential learning organized around the
investigation, explanation, and resolution of meaningful problems (Barrows,
2000;
Torp and Sage, 2002).
Anchored Instruction uses a video based problem to introduce
a challenge at the end. The problem
allows learners to apply their shared knowledge to a relevant problem; they
also support ongoing problem comprehension because the solutions of ten require
15-20 steps.
In Problem Based Science, the problem is a driving question. The problem is the focus for scientific
inquiry and students must determine how they will answer their questions.
Two key issues that go to the heart of all three approaches
are:
1.
The emphasis of learners actively constructing
knowledge in collaborative groups.
2.
The transformation of student and teacher roles. Teacher is a facilitator of collaborative
learning rather than the main repository of knowledge. Though the teacher may still do some direct
instruction it is more in a more limited capacity and usually when such
instruction is necessary to fill in necessary information relevant to the
problem.
The author states that Self Directed learning (SDL) is a
distinguishing feature of PBL, but I am unclear why/how SDL is not a
characteristic of the other approaches as well.
Goals of PBL
1) construct an extensive and flexible knowledge base:
Constructing an extensive and flexible knowledge base
involves going beyond accessing informational domains in isolation and requires
integrating multiple domains. "It
is also flexibly conditionalized to the extent that it can be fluently
retrieved and applied under varying and appropriate
circumstances"(Bransford et al., 1990).
I interpret this to mean that the learner is conditioned to expect skills
from different domains to be a part of any given problem - rather than a
traditional approach where a domain is covered and then might rarely be used
again. Understanding, in this context,
places knowledge of a domain in a toolbox that can be used frequently to assist
in further problem solving.
2) develop effective problem-solving skills:
Developing effective problem-solving skills involves introducing
problems that require the use of these skills.
This goal also requires the ability to apply appropriate metacognitive
and reasoning strategies. Metacognitive
in this context refers to the learners ability to reflect on and create a
problem solving plan, monitoring progress, and evaluating whether goals have
been reached (Schoenfeld, 1985).
3) develop self-directed, lifelong learning skills:
Developing self-directed, lifelong learning skills is also
related to metacognitive strategies. Learner’s
must be able to identify what they do and do not understand. They must be able to set learning goals, and
finally they must be a able to select appropriate learning strategies.
4) becoming effective collaborators:
Being a good collaborator means knowing how to function well
as part of a team. This includes
establishing common ground, resolving discrepancies, taking mutually agreed
upon action and coming to agreement.
5) becoming intrinsically motivated to learn
The final goal of becoming intrinsically motivate occurs
when learners work on a task that is motivated by their own interests. Providing problems that engage learners
require that the problem designers understand what is developmentally
appropriate for their students - challenging without being overwhelming. To be
intrinsically motivating problems should provide students with "the
proximal and tangible goal of applying their knowledge to solve a concrete
problem" Silver p. 241.
The PBL Tutorial
Process
The PBL learning cycle begins with the tutorial
process. The tutorial process begins
with the presentation of a problem and ends with student reflection. The PBL tutorial begins by presenting the
learning group with a complex problem.
The problem requires the drop to collaborate together as well as
question the facilitator as the go through a process leading to a
solution. The article describes a
process where whiteboards are used. The
boards are broken into 4 columns, Ideas, Learning Issues, Action Plan. The "Facts" section keeps track of
information embedded in the problem.
"Ideas" serves to track the on going hypothesis about possible
solutions to the problem. "Learning
Issues" tracks the issues which need further study or perhaps
clarification from the facilitator. The
"Action Plan" column track of plans for resolving the issue.
The Role of The
Problem
Some of the characteristics of well structured PBL problems
are that they are:
- · ill structured
- · open ended
- · realistic and resonating for the learner
- · promote conjecture and argumentation
- · complex enough to require interrelated pieces
- · often require multidisciplinary solutions
The Role of the
Facilitator
Good problems are a necessary but not sufficient conditions
for effective PBL. The teacher is an
expert learner, able to model good learning strategies for learning and
thinking, rather than an expert on the content alone. The facilitator scaffolds through the use of
effective questioning strategies.
Facilitation is a subtle skill involving knowing when and what questions
are called for.
Collaborative
Learning in PBL
Small problem solving groups are a key feature of PBL. Small group structure may help distribute the
cognitive load and may also widen the spectrum of expertise available to solve
the problem. Research also suggests that
small group discussion enhance problem solving and higher order thinking.
Reflection in PBL
Reflection on the relationship between solving and learning
in a integral component of PBL. It is
need to support the construction of extensive and flexible knowledge. "Reflection helps students (a) relate
their new knowledge to their prior understanding, (b) mindfully abstract
knowledge, and(c) understand how their learning and problem-solving strategies
might be reapplied. " Silver p. 248
What have we learned
about PBL
This section provides a discussion of the evidence that PBL
reaches its purported goals. Much of the
evidence came from medical schools and gifted educations institutions.
Constructive Extensive and Flexible
Knowledge
Med students scored slightly lower
on more traditional, multiple choice based outcome measures but slightly higher
clinical problem solving examinations.
Developing Effective Problem Solving
Skills
Med students from a PBL curriculum
were more likely to provide hypothesis-driven reasoning than were students
using a more traditional curriculum.
Hypothesis driven reasoning is a reasoning strategy taught by PBL and
one indicator of effective problem solving skills is the ability or transfer
reasoning strategies to new problems. In
my interpretation of these results, this does not show that traditional
students were less able to develop effective problem solving skills. If the indicator is that taught skills are more
likely to be used again, they results would also need to show that traditional
students had been taught a this approach, or another, but failed to used it in
the context of a new problem.
Developing SDL Skills
The research about developing SDL
skills is focuses primarily on professional studies students. And at the time the article was written
(2004) opportunities for research for on wider groups was plentiful. For students who are poor self regulators,
PBL is likely to pose difficulties without appropriate scaffolding for students
trying to develop SDL skills. Becoming a
self directed learner through the process of PBL is not a given. How to structure PBL for less mature learners
is still an open question. Scaffolding
is important for younger learning but research has also shown it to be
necessary for adult learners.
Becoming Effective Collaborators
There is not enough evidence to
support the hypothesis that PBL helps students become better collaborators. There is evidence that students work together
to provide collaborative explanations.
There is also evidence that collaboration in tutorial groups plays an
important role in motivation and student groups. But there is also evidence that not all
groups collaborate well.
Becoming Intrinsically
Motivated
There is little research that
focused directly on this issue. Most of
the research has focused on student satisfaction and confidence. The results of a PBL approach to statistical
reasoning was mixed some enjoyed the class but other resisted changes to their
ways of learning. There is little
empirical evidence about motivation in undergraduate and k-12 education.
My Questions And Reflections:
This article on PBL is similar in may ways to PBL as I have
experienced it, but also differs in many ways and I wonder if there are
multiple approaches using the same names.
For instance this example of a PBL problem form the article " when
middle-school children were asked to build artificial lungs, they performed
experiments to determine how much air the lungs had to displace (Hmelo et al.,
2000). At several points during their problem solving, students typically
pause to reflect on the
data they have collected so far, generate questions about
those data, and hypothesize
about underlying causal mechanisms that might help explain
the
data." is much different than the PBL mathematics
problem solving approach used at Exeter
academy.
Even thought the PBL in this article is focused on larger
problems than the ones I am currently tackling in my classroom, the section on
the tutorial process, and the section on using the white boards in columns
is something I can take back to my classroom.
Very intrigued by the section on the role of the
facilitator, would like to find more literature about this. Interesting both from and academic and
professional growth perspective.
Much of the evidence about PBL in this article comes from
medical schools or gifted education programs.
This is not the demographic I am working with and I wonder how effective
the approach has been with other demographics and what research has been done to
look at that.
5 comments:
Bryan~
Wow! This is a detailed summary of the articles main points and strategies! I especially liked how to took the time to unpack each of the goals of PBL and how the authors were defining them.
I'm intrigued by several things you write about in your reflection and would love to know more about what you are thinking. For example, how does this approach differ from Exeter and what you are currently doing? Did you get any ideas for things you might want to try/tweak? And what about the facilitator role particularly struck you, and why?
I'm also glad that you noted the population this study was based on - that is an important thing to keep in mind when thinking through how to translate the findings to your own work. It's concerning to me that studies of problem-based learning often happen in gifted programs or actually in private schools like Exeter. I wonder if underlying this is the assumption that only "gifted" kids can do this work... it brings to mind one of the most disturbing quotes I often hear from visitors to our schools: "Well, this is great, but I couldn't do this with my kids." I disagree with this with every fiber of my being and am anxiously awaiting more studies of doing problem and project-based learning with all kids!
Bryan,
This is really an impressive review of the work. I am excited that you are finding great articles and it seems like you are starting to get a focus in your research. I was struck by the demographic information as well and it got me wonder, especially after our school visit, how your research question might have something to do with the demographics at your school.
Thanks for the comment and questions Stacey, I think it's worthwhile for me to answer them here, so here goes:
Q. How does this approach differ from Exeter and what you are currently doing?
A. The approach to PBL as defined in this article is to tackle larger problems. A single problem, or set of related that might take a small group of collaborative learners several hour or more to solve. There is a specific collaboration model that breaks the process of engaging the problems into 4 interrelated processes: Identifying Facts, Tracking Ideas For Problem Solving, Identifying Skills that Need to be Acquired, and Developing a Plan of Action.
Some of these steps are a part of the exeter model and what I am doing in my classroom, but the are introduced as problem solving strategies rather than a formalized approach. Additionally the scope/breadth of each of the problems in one of my classrooms is usually mach narrower than the larger problems presented in the article. My kids are usually tackling 4-6 problems per class. Also, one facet of PBL as I have experienced is the idea that the content necessary to solve a problem should be partly or completely embedded in the problem itself or should be known as the result of solving a previous problem. This was not mentioned in the articles discussion of PBL.
Q. Did you get any ideas for things you might want to try/tweak?
I gave a question in class today that was simply, how much does my yearly work commit cost. In pairs I asked students to address the facts, specifically I asked them to come up with 5-7 factual questions that they would like to ask me to help them start figuring out the problem. This models the 'bigger' type of PBL problem in the article. An the questioning phase models the fact identification phase of PBL as described in the article. I am was so excited about it that I gave the same problem to my math block - a mix of 6ht 7th and 8th graders.
Q. And what about the facilitator role particularly struck you, and why?
I want to be the great facilitator. The one that sees what when my kids are on the verge of an understanding and can lead them to discoveries, who can ask the right questions and to know when to keep quiet. To see when frustration levels are getting too high and to know the difference between a good struggle and a bad one. To convey information with a smile or a frown. It's why I want to be a teacher, the conversations, the active listening, the strategy and the tactics. It is really difficult to do well and the challenge of it and the progress I've seen and the growth I still seek is what gets me excited about coming to work everyday.
Hi Katy,
Thanks for the comment! I think your right on with the demographics piece. The idea that collaboration and complex problem solving is beyond certain kids is, to me, no different than saying that mathematics or reading is beyond certain kids. Maybe its just beyond certain schools and certain teachers :-) . I don't know but I feel that teaching kids how to collaborate and solve problems that are not simple is one of the most important things we can teach our kids to do.
Stacey, the question I gave was "How much does my yearly commute to work cost?"
Post a Comment