HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
Review of essential questions
1. CED 505, Fall 2011 1
Lucy Allen
Review of Essential Questions Websites
Website Information Information Restated Something I
learned
http://www.galileo.org/tips/essential_questions.html Essential questions are the After reading this
Title:“Creating Essential Questions” fundamental organizing article, I learned
principles that rely on inquiry that essential
Essential questions develop foundational understandings. They provide to develop meaningful, questions are not
the fundamental organizing principles that bound an inquiry and guide authentic tasks that develop only on the
the development of meaningful, authentic tasks. Essential questions foundational understandings. boundary of the
have several key components: known but the
They arise from people‟s attempts, throughout human history, People want to learn more unknown as well.
to learn more about the world(s) we live in. about the world and this It also made sense
Essential questions are so compelling that people have raised prompts the need for essential to me that people
them in many different ways. questions. using their
Attempts to answer essential questions allow people to explore imagination leads
the connection between their personal, individual, unique Essential questions prompt to inquiry, with is
experience of the world and its exterior, objective, held-in- people to explore the at the base of
common dimensions. connection with their own essential
Essential questions allow us to explore what knowledge is, individual experiences and questions.
how it came to be, and how it has changed through human compare it to the different
history. dimensions within the world.
An essential question is always poised at the boundary of the
known and the unknown. Essential questions promote
An essential question reaches beyond itself. It is embedded in the exploration of knowledge,
ideals of freedom, strength and possibility that permit people its history, and how it has
to come-to-know without becoming trapped in constructs that changed. Essential questions
are oppressive or no longer useful. are at the boundaries of the
An essential question engages the imagination in significant ways. known and unknown and
Without imagination, we could not ask the questions that drive science always reach beyond itself.
forward.
Essential questions have no
boundaries and because of
that it allows people to use
their imagination to explore
and push science forward.
http://www.fno.org/Sept96/questions.html Essential questions provide I was surprised
Title: “ From Now On” meaning and motivation to that students
research. These questions are should have to
Essential questions set students and staff free from this tedious and constructed b evaluating gather most of
wasteful ritual. Research becomes motivating and meaningful. An synthesizing and analyzing their information
essential question has the following attributes: information. Essential outside of the
Essential questions reside at the top of Blooms Taxonomy questions spark curiosity and classroom. I would
(Bloom, 1954). They require students to EVALUATE, wonder to answers that have thought that
SYNTHESIZE and ANALYZE. cannot be found without most of this would
Answers to essential questions cannot be found. They must inventing them. Students find have been
be invented. Students must construct their own answers and answers by constructing their completed inside
make their own meaning from the information they have own meaning from the the classroom. I
gathered. They create insight. information they have guess with limited
Answering such questions may take a life time, and even then, gathered. This information class time, it would
the answers may only be tentative ones. should be gathered over time force students to
Essential questions engage students in the kinds of real life and outside of class time, gather information
applied problem-solving suggested by nearly every new which means that students outside of the
curriculum report or outline curriculum standards such as the should take the initiative to classroom.
NCTM and the Science standards. visit libraries for further
Essential questions usually lend themselves well to exploration. Essential
multidisciplinary investigations, requiring that students apply questions engage students
the skills and perspectives of math and language arts while into problem-solving and
wrestling with content from social studies or science. multidisciplinary
investigations. Students often
form small questions that will
lead to answering the main
question. In formulating the
answer to questions, students
list suppositions, pose
hypothesis and make
predictions. These predictions
2. CED 505, Fall 2011 2
Lucy Allen
can be revised as more
information is gathered. By
following this model, students
are enabled to construct
meaning and reconstruct
meaning.
http://www.fno.org/feb01/pl.html By limiting students to games I had never really
Title: “From Trivial Pursuit to Essential Questions and Standards- on how to do research, it thought about
Based Learning” deprives them from exploring students not being
tough issues, choices, able to explore
When we limit students to trivial pursuit, we make a mockery of dilemmas and questions that issues because of
authentic research and deprive them of a chance to explore the tough really matter. staff not having
issues, choices, dilemmas and questions that really matter. They are enough time to
questions that help us to make meaning out of events and Essential questions provide incorporate
circumstances of our lives. But essential questions require that meaning from events and essential questions
students spend time pondering the meaning and importance of circumstances in our lives. into their
information. Essential questions are questions that resonate within our This enables students to think curriculum. I am
hearts and out souls. about the meaning and sure that there are
importance of information. many standards
If we were to draw a cluster diagram of the Questioning Tool Kit, that have to be met
essential questions would be at the center of all the other types of Essential questions come from and it must be
questions. All the other questions and questioning skills serve the within our hearts and souls. difficult to balance
purpose of “casting light upon” or “illuminating essential questions.” These questions are located at this along with
Most essential questions are interdisciplinary in nature. Essential the center of all other incorporating
questions are at the heart of a search for Truth. questions. All of these other essential questions
questions shed light upon or into the
Many of us believe that schools should devote more time to essential illuminate essential questions. curriculum.
questions and less time to trivial pursuit. Schools will see the best
returns on investment when they engage students as infotectives. They Most essential questions are
develop the ability to interpret, analyze and infer. Students spend their interdisciplinary and probe
time transforming information into meaning… the deepest, complex, and
Finding meaning baffling matters that require
Creating meaning more than one simple answer.
Extending meaning Essential questions are at the
Reading between the lines core of the search for the
Working with clues Truth.
Building theories
In contrast, when schools engage students in trivial pursuit or Schools should allow students
investigations that involve more entertainment than rigor and to be infotectives to interpret,
substance, they waste their time and risk inspiring the (warranted) analyze and infer information.
resistance of staff members who already have too little time to address Students transform
the demanding curriculum standards of this decade. information into meaning by
finding meaning, creating
meaning, extending meaning,
reading between the lines,
working with clues and
building theories. When
schools engage students with
games, they waste student‟s
time and deter inspiration
from staff that barely have
enough time to teach basic
standards.
http://www.fno.org/toolbox.html Students are naturally I liked the idea of
Title: “Filling the Toolbox” inquisitive and we should let having students
them be curious when it create questions to
As one of the primary goals of education is to develop autonomous but comes to learning. use for class
interdependent thinkers, students deserve frequent opportunities to discussion the next
shape and direct classroom inquiry. To fuel this inquiry, it is also As a teacher, try starting a day. I can see how
essential that we validate the importance of curiosity in the process of lesson by asking students it would naturally
learning. what questions should be extend their
asked about the topic. If the thinking processes.
Try starting a new unit by asking your class to think of questions that teacher asks though
could be asked about a topic. If students are not used to this type of provoking questions, students
experience, they are likely to echo the kinds of questions they read at are likely to model their
the end of textbook chapters or the kinds of questions teachers behavior. While students are
generally ask around memory of facts and generalizations. If you ask presenting questions, it is
many tantalizing and divergent questions in your classroom, your important for the teacher to
3. CED 505, Fall 2011 3
Lucy Allen
students are likely to model after your behavior. not appear judgmental. A
good way to eliminate
As students begin to suggest questions, it is essential that the teacher criticism is to brainstorm.
restrain judgmental cues. It is better to list questions without verbal or There are four rules for
body language comments. Otherwise students may play a game called brainstorming as follows:
“Please the Authority” instead of liberating their curiosity. All
suggestions/questio
A key tool in eliminating criticism is brainstorming. The four rules of ns should be
brainstorming: accepted without
All contributions are accepted without judgment; judgment.
The goal is a large number of ideas or questions; The end goal is to
Building on other people‟s ideas is encouraged; receive lots of
Farout, unusual ideas are encouraged. questions.
Students should be
Once the questions are listed and the storm of curiosity has subsided encouraged to build
somewhat, it is often useful to go through an exercise of categorization, upon other ideas.
asking the students how they might group any of the questions. These The teacher should
categories can then provide the basis for organizing and structuring the be encouraged to
investigation for the next few days or weeks. Eventually students will build on others
use the categorizing step to generate even more questions as they ideas.
realized that they have omitted a parallel category or the process of The teacher should
categorization leads them to extend one of the categories. Once encourage “out of the
students have categorized questions, you might spend some time asking box” type questions.
them to identify which questions seem most interesting and which
would be the least interesting. Once students begin to label different After all questions have been
types of questions, questions become powerful tools for thinking. created, it is important to
Thinking about thinking about questioning both tend to strengthen the group questions into
power for student thought. categories, which will create
even more questions. Next,
When students begin to label the different kinds of questions, they learn the teacher should ask
to select different kinds of questions to perform different kinds of students which questions are
thinking. No matter what the level of schooling, some kind of label can interesting and which
work effectively. questions are not. This leads
to a process of labeling, which
Teach students that questions are like tools in a tool box. Thinking encourages students to think
requires a choice of questions. and strengthen their power of
thought.
To introduce students to the idea of categorizing questions, bring in a
tool box of tools and ask them to suggest how they might be organized When students label
in the toolbox based on what they do. questions, they automatically
perform different kinds of
Primary students may begin with three or four types of questions. thinking. Students should
Middle school and secondary level students can create a typology think of questions as being
around their own questions. tools in a toolbox. These tools
should be organized based on
Put your classroom questioning typology to work with your homework the specifications of the topic
assignments. If students read an assignment, let them form questions being researched.
for the next day‟s discussion. Ask them to identify the most important
and the least important questions. Encourage students to bring
questions to class that revolve
If your class is about to read a story or see a film about an event, tell around a prior learning
them in advance that you will ask one of them to act as one of the main assignment. Here again,
figures in the story or film once it is over. The rest of the class will take students should be able to
turns asking that student interview questions. It is important to ask all identify which questions are
students in the class to actually write out at least three questions to important, and which ones
ask. Students may otherwise rely upon a small number of highly active are not.
and vocal students to carry the effort.
It is important to designate
When question are nurtured, admitting lack of knowledge is reward. It one student to enact a
is the first step in learning and problem-solving. character (for example after a
story is read) and have the
Label thinking questions by telling a class that a particular question is other students think of three
a one minute or a five minute or a ten minute question. Let them questions to ask the student
struggle with some of the multi-century questions. Ask them what their playing the character, after
minds do when they tackle such questions. Refuse to call on students the story is read. This
while they are meant to be thinking. develops good learning and
problem-solving skills.
Show them the structure of thought that should underlie and informed
4. CED 505, Fall 2011 4
Lucy Allen
conclusion to a demanding question. Work through the supporting As a teacher, tell your
arguments on the chalkboard so they can see that the main idea is students if a question that
supported by a framework of other thoughts. you ask should be thought
about for one, five or ten
Using the class developed typology, ask students to formulate and minutes. Refuse to call on
answer three questions of their own that fit a particular type. Another students while they are
approach is to develop a list of book reporting questions as a class supposed to be thinking about
activity. Students may then select from a rich menu each time they a question. If students appear
complete a report. to struggle with a question,
that is okay as you are
The teacher‟s careful analysis of the students‟ progress in thinking nurturing the thinking
through the questions is the other essential ingredient. process. If students appear to
struggle with a concept make
sure that you show them on
the chalkboard so that they
can see that a main idea is
supported by a framework of
other thoughts.
As a teacher, ask your
students to develop and
answer three questions that
compare/contrast a concept.
Another idea is for the teacher
to develop a rich list of
questions that students can
then pick from.
http://www.fno.org/nov97/toolkit.html Each school district should I had never really
Title: “A Questioning Toolkit” have a toolbox of different thought of
kinds of questions to not only Essential
Each district should create a Questioning Toolkit which contains promote thinking, but also to Questions as being
several dozen kinds of questions and questioning tools. This provoke it. This toolkit of among students
Questioning Toolkit should be printed in large type on posters which questions should be most important
reside on classroom walls close by networked, information-rich introduced to students when thoughts in life. It
computers. Portions of the Questioning Toolkit should be introduced as they first start school. A makes sense when
early as Kindergarten so that students can bring powerful questioning students most important you think about it
technologies and techniques with them as they arrive in high school. thoughts in life will center as to learn one
around Essential Questions. must promote
There are questions which touch our hearts and souls. They are central Most essential questions are questions to
to our lives. They help define what it means to be human. Most interdisciplinary and provoke expand and
important thought during our lives will center on such essential deep, complex issues, which improve upon
questions. cannot be answered simply. anything that is to
Essential Questions seek be learned.
Most Essential Questions are interdisciplinary in nature. Essential truth. Many believe that
Questions prove the deepest issues confronting us…complex and schools should promote
baffling matters which elude simple answers. Essential Questions are Essential Questions, rather
at the heart of the search for Truth. than games of Trivial Pursuit,
which is a process of asking
Many of us believe that schools should devote more time on Essential questions to see pre-
Question and less to Trivial Pursuit. determined answers.
Essential Questions offer the organizing focus for a unit. Subsidiary Questions
Subsidiary Questions These questions are formed in
These are questions which combine to help us build answers to our order to determine the
Essential Questions. Big questions spawn families of smaller questions Essential Questions. A good
which lead to insight. The more skillful we and our students become at idea for students is to
formulating and then categorizing Subsidiary Questions, the more brainstorm and list every
success we will have constructing new knowledge. question they can think of.
This promotes spontaneity.
We can brainstorm and list every question which comes to mind. This
approach has the benefit of spontaneity.
We can take a list of question categories like the one outlined in this
article and generate questions for each category. This approach helps
provoke thought and questions in categories which we might not
otherwise consider.
http://www.fno.org/parenting/outline.html Inventing - Parents should I like the parental
5. CED 505, Fall 2011 5
Lucy Allen
Title: “Parenting or an Age of Information: Preparing Your Daughter or help their children to get the involvement in this
Son for the Next Century” most out of school and life article. Parents
experiences. Some ways to really do play a
Inventing- Parents can equip their children to make the most of school accomplish this are as follows: critical role in what
and life experiences. Play “what it” games and how their child
Play “What if…” games with your children Encourage learns. I was
Model the spirit of inventiveness inventiveness surprised by giving
Nurture your child‟s imagination Nurture your child‟s your child choices,
Encourage selective television-viewing imagination but can see that
Reward responsible risk-taking Be selective as to the without choice
Questioning – Questions are tools of thinking that can be modified and programs your child they will never be
molded to fit shifting situations. watches on television able to think about
Welcome “Why?” questions Encourage risk and develop
Make your child‟s life as wonder-full as possible taking essential
Guard against excessive routine Questioning - This is an questions.
Admit you do not have all the answers essential tool that can be
Collect and relish puzzles molded and used in different
Encourage optimism, faith and the benefit of the doubt situations. Some ideas to
Puzzling – Good puzzling skills produce insight, the capacity to discern encourage this include:
the true nature of the situation. Embrace “why”
Fill the Toy Chest with Puzzles questions
String Necklaces Make sure that your
Introduce Games of Strategy child has a fulfilling
Emphasize Observation, Recording and Interpretation life.
Model the Crow‟s Nest Perspective Try not to follow
Choosing – They look ahead to assess the likely consequences of extreme routines.
various choices. Let your child know
Give your child more than a single choice that you do not know
Develop the skill of compare-and-contrast every answer to every
Shop around question
Use role-playing to test consequences Collect and use
Bring your child into the voting booth puzzles
Develop a family decision-making council Encourage optimism
and doubt
Puzzling – these skills provide
insight, which plays to the
true nature of a situation.
Some ideas to promote this
include:
Have a variety of
different kinds of
puzzles
Play strategy games
Ensure that your
child observes,
records and
interprets
information
accurately
Choosing – children should
learn to choose different
possibilities and solutions.
Some ideas to promote this
include:
Give your child a
variety of choices
Teach your child to
compare/contrast
Encourage role-
playing to test
different scenarios
Bring your child to
the voting booth
Develop a decision-
making council
within your family
http://web001.greece.k12.ny.us/academics.cfm?subpage=923 Themes and essential The basic criteria
6. CED 505, Fall 2011 6
Lucy Allen
Title: Themes & Essential Questions Framing Inquiry & Promoting questions help students tap listed for essential
Critical Thinking” into natural inquiry and questions really
promote critical thinking. It promote the idea of
Themes and essential questions help to frame student inquiry and also helps frame and organize inquiry by
promote critical thinking. They also provide a helpful framework for study by using a multi-genre pinpointing the
organizing a unit of study using a multi-genre approach. approach. Essential exact tools needed
questions have basic criteria in order to achieve
Good essential questions have some basic criteria in common: as follows: the overall goal of
They are open-ended and resist a simple or single right Are open-ended and student learning.
answer. have no simple
They are deliberately thought-provoking, counterintuitive, answers
and/or controversial Promote thought,
They require students to draw upon content knowledge and counter-intuition
personal experience. and sometimes
They can be revisited throughout the unit to engage students controversy.
in evolving dialogue and debate. Taps into previous
The remainder of this article had files of questions for grades 6-12. knowledge and
personal experience
Promote engagement
with evolving
dialogue and debate
throughout the study
process.
There are also numerous
questions listed from grade 6-
12 and additional questions to
use and think about when
pursuing a unit of study.
http://www.bie.org/images/uploads/useful_stuff/7_Essentials_PBL- This article discusses I was pleasantly
EdLeaderSept10.pdf traditional classroom projects surprised with the
Title: “7 Essentials for Project-Based Learning and compares them to a concept of
project using project-based “presenting to the
A classroom filled with student posters may suggest that students have learning. Student public.” I think
engaged in meaningful learning, But it is the process of students‟ engagement and learning that a lot of
learning and the depth of their cognitive engagement-rather than the distinguishes projects from student work
resulting product-that distinguishes projects from busywork. busywork. A good project should be
has two criteria: presented in this
A project is meaningful if it fulfills two criteria. First, students must A project must be way as it provides
perceive the work as personally meaningful, a task that matters and meaningful to meaning, purpose,
that they want to do well. Second, a meaningful project fulfills an students. and makes
educational purpose. A meaningful project students feel like
serves an they are
1. A Need to Know – Teachers can powerfully activate students‟ educational purpose. contributing to the
need to know content by launching a project with an “entry If teachers approach a project larger community.
event” that engages interest and initiates questioning. In with engagement, students
contrast, announcing a project by distributing a packet of will naturally have questions.
papers is likely to turn students off; it looks like a prelude to If a teacher just hands
busywork. With a compelling student project, the reason for students a packet of papers
learning relevant material becomes clear. I need to know this with instructions, it appears
to meet the challenge I‟ve accepted. as busywork. The reason for
2. A Driving Question – A good driving question captures the learning then turns into the
heart of the project in clear, compelling language, which gives challenge of the students
students a sense of purpose and challenge. The question wanting to learn.
should be provocative, open-ended, complex, and linked to the
core of what you want students to learn. A project without a When teachers provide
driving question is like and essay without a thesis. students with engaging
3. Student Voice and Choice– This element of project-based questions, students feel like
learning is key. In terms of making a project feel more they have purpose and are
meaningful to students, the more voice and choice, the better. challenged to find an answer
On the “the more, the better” end of the scale, students can to the question.
decide what products they will create, what resources they will
use, and how they will structure their time. Students could The more voice and choice
even choose a project‟s topic and driving questions. students have the better.
4. 21st Century Skills – A project should give students
opportunities to build such 21st century skills as collaboration, By adding 21st century skills
communication, critical thinking, and the use of technology, to a project, students are able
which will serve them well in the workplace and life. This to collaborate, communicate
exposure to authentic skills meets the second criterion for and incorporate critical
7. CED 505, Fall 2011 7
Lucy Allen
meaningful work – an important purpose. A teacher in a thinking skills with the use of
project-based learning environment explicitly teaches and technology. This type of work
assesses these skills and provides frequent opportunities for provides purpose.
students to assess themselves.
5. Inquiry and Innovation – Students find project work more Inquiry is at the base of
meaningful if they conduct real inquiry, which does not mean student learning because it
finding information in books or websites and pasting it onto a utilizes questions that lead to
poster. In real inquiry, students follow a trail that begins with research to find the answer.
their own questions, leads to a search for resources and the Often new questions are
discovery of answers, and often ultimately leads to generating established by using this
new questions, testing ideas, and drawing their own process.
conclusions. With real inquiry comes innovation – a new
answer to a driving question, a new product, or an individually It is important for teachers to
generated solution to a problem. The teacher does not ask provide feedback to students
students to simply reproduce teacher or textbook-provided as it provides meaning and
information in a pretty format. purpose. It is also important
6. Feedback and Revision – Formulating a process for feedback for students to learn that
and revision during a project makes learning meaningful revision is part of this process.
because it emphasizes that creating high-quality products and
performances is an important purpose of the endeavor. When students are able to
Students need to learn that most people‟s first attempts don‟t present their work to the
result in high quality and that revision is a frequent feature of public, it is often quality work
real-world work. that is authentic and can
7. A Publicly Presented Product – Schoolwork is more possibly be used by
meaningful when it‟s not done only for the teacher or the test. individuals outside of the
When students present their work to a real audience, they care school setting.
more about the quality. Once again, it‟s “the more is better”
when it comes to authenticity. Students might replicate the
kinds of tasks done by professionals – but even better, they
might create real products that people outside school use.
http://www.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=3751748&print=1 Project-based learning There was one
Title: “The Power of Project Learning” engages students, teaches sentence in this
them how to organize, how to article that really
Project-based learning can be traced back to John Dewey and it has present finding, how to caught my
come and gone since the early 20th century. manage a complex project and attention, “We
how to collaborate with other have to give
The big payoff for PBL, as its advocates refer to it, comes when engaged students in a group. [students]
students learn not only the curricula and the concepts involved in a permission to
project, but also learn how to organize and present their thoughts, how New Technology high schools think, not teach
to manage a complex project in a limited amount of time, and how to were originally opened to them what to
collaborate with members of a group. teach students skills that they think.” I think
would need to confront the that students are
Of these, New Technology High School in Napa, California, is the economy once out of high so regimented into
epicenter. Opened in 1996, this high school was created to help school. There are currently following
students gain the skills needed for the new economy. Three years later, 40 of these new tech schools instructions in a
the New Technology Foundation followed, its mission to help replicate across the United States. classroom that
Napa‟s school model throughout the country. There are now 40 new their minds are
Tech schools from coast to coast, including eight in California and four Students in these new tech often closed to
each in Texas and Louisiana. high schools are able to utilize thinking “outside
the Internet by accessing the box.”
High Tech students regularly make movies, robots, and websites, and electronic resources, make
finish by presenting their work publicly to real audiences. movies and even robots. The
coursework in these high tech
The school‟s schedule allows for cross-curricula work to be done over a schools are cross-curricular,
period of hours per day. Students can access their work from anywhere so work is carried out over
with an Internet connection. several hours during the day.
The best part is since all of
Some people are worried that if someone walks by a classroom, and it this work is housed on the
seems disorderly, it will look like students aren‟t on task. Some Internet; students can access
teachers are reluctant to commit to PBL because they fear it means it and work on it at any time.
scrapping a style they are comfortable with and starting over.
There are people opposed to
“It‟s not an additional burden of work, it‟s a transition of work” says this new kind of teaching
David Ross, Buck Institutes director of professional development. because they think that
Instead of creating daily lessons, teachers do their planning before the students should be in their
launch of a project. Once the project starts, their job is to make sure seats, instead of scattered
students stay on track and cover the objectives. around a room in groups.
Teachers often are so
8. CED 505, Fall 2011 8
Lucy Allen
While younger teachers may seem more willing to try projects than 20- comfortable with a teaching
year veterans, some of the classroom‟s biggest doubters are its youngest style that they do not want to
members. Students are habituated in elementary and middle school to embrace or be part of any
act alone. They think they have to solve problems by themselves. „We change.
have to give [students] permission to think, not teach them what to
think.” David Ross, Director of the
Buck Institute in professional
While teachers can certainly debate whether PBL would work in their development states that, “It‟s
classrooms, one aspect seems unassailable: the idea that when done not an additional burden of
properly, students receive much more knowledge than can be recorded work; it‟s a transition of
on a bubble test. work.” Teachers no longer are
planning lesson plans but
What Makes a Great Project? “Have clear, strong-instructional goals,” now play a part in guiding a
says Suzie Boss, coauthor of Reinventing Project-Based Learning. “The project.
best questions have no clear answers,” says Tech Valley High School
Principal Dan Liebert. „As opposed to getting the right answer, [we tell Just as some adults are
students] to come up with an answer they can defend.‟ Gary Stager, the apprehensive about this type
executive director at the Constructivist Consortium and an adjunct of learning, so are younger
professor of education at Pepperdine, says the elements of a good students. “Students are
project should include relevance for students, ample time to plan, habituated in elementary and
change, and complete the project, and enough complexity to inspire middle school to act alone.
intense work. There should also be a way to connect the project with They think that they have to
people across the hall, on the other side of town, or across the world, an solve problems by
opportunity for students to collaborate with peers, international themselves.”
experts, and anybody in between, and a way for students to share their
completed work. There are a few factors that
are key to great projects:
Projects should be
clear with strong
instructional goals.
Projects should have
relevance.
Projects should have
room for change.
Projects should be
complete.
Projects should be
complex to provide
intense work.
Projects should
provide a way for
students to share
their work with peers
in their community
and all over the
world.