Project-Based Learning: A Student-Centered Approach: Purpose
Project-Based Learning: A Student-Centered Approach: Purpose
Project-Based Learning: A Student-Centered Approach: Purpose
Sustained Inquiry
Inquiry is the process by which students gain knowledge, understanding, and skills while
determining approaches for applying what they learn to a real-world challenge. Sustained inquiry
includes the steps students take in response to the driving question, and upon which they ask
themselves “What do we know?” and “What do we need to know?” (Larmer, Mergendoller, &
Boss 2015). With teacher guidance and encouragement, students determine and follow their own
path to learning through research and inquiry, and through creative thinking and innovation
develop an authentic response to a real-world problem.
Contact Information:
If you have questions about this document or would like additional information, please contact:
Kyle Anderson, Student Pathways, at kyle.anderson@vermont.gov, or
Emily Leute, Student Pathways, at emily.leute@vermont.gov.
Essential Elements and Connections with Proficiency-Based and Personalized Learning
The seven essential elements of Gold Standard PBL can be outlined and integrated into Project-
Based Learning to ensure rigor, student ownership, and authenticity. These elements can be used
to guide teachers through planning units that support engagement, understanding, and
proficiency in any academic domain, and ultimately support student-centered learning in any
learning environment.
A Focus on Proficiency
In Project-Based Learning, students must ideate, inquire, develop, refine, produce, present,
explain, justify, and defend their response to an academic challenge, culminating in a product that
can be used for the betterment of the community or an initiative. Through these processes,
students engage in multiple assessments and have myriad opportunities to improve skills and
knowledge to demonstrate proficiency. There is no single measure to assess the key knowledge
and skills necessary to create a solution to an open-ended academic challenge. Therefore, a single
overall score on a personalized and sustained process like Project-Based Learning would
demonstrate multiple proficiencies across academic domains. Students and teachers must evaluate
In addition to its pivot-ready nature, Project-Based Learning can serve as a pedagogical tool to
support the development of transferrable skills, student-directed learning, and a Vermont Portrait
of a Graduate. With the Gold Standard design elements in place, the approach can guide students
through developing skills for each attribute of the Portrait. Gold Standard projects are anchored in
authenticity as they focus on real-world contexts or students’ own concerns with social and global
issues, thus supporting their role as global citizens.
As students engage in sustained inquiry, they expand upon their academic proficiency, gaining
essential knowledge and a personal understanding of how to apply it. Students regularly reflect on
their work and learning process throughout phases of Project-Based Learning; they identify and
develop quality standards for and ownership of their learning as they grow their sense of learner
agency. Adding to their sense of self, place, purpose, and overall well-being, students explore and
share learning through their own lens and preferences with elements of voice and choice.
Each element is addressed in pursuit of a student-developed solution to a driving question; a
student’s primary role in a Project-Based Learning unit is as a critical thinker, problem solver, and
innovator. These are characteristics that are fostered in the critique and revision phase and product
development. As students prepare to present, explain, and defend their public product to a wide
audience, they explore and develop their strengths as a real-world communicator.
References
Boaler, J. (2002). Learning from teaching: Exploring the relationship between reform curriculum
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Boss, S. & Larmer, J. (2018). Project-Based Teaching: How to Create Rigorous and Engaging
Learning Experiences. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Hixson, N.K., Ravitz, J., & Whisman, A. (2012). Extended professional development in Project-
Based Learning: Impacts on 21st century skills teaching and student achievement: West Virginia
Department of Education.
Larmer, J., Mergendoller, J., & Boss, S. (2015). Setting the Standard for Project Based Learning: A
Proven Approach to Rigorous Classroom Instruction. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
Larmer, John. (2020). Project-Based Learning Can Make Remote Learning More Meaningful. Green
Schools National Network.
Penuel, W. R., & Means, B. (1999). Observing classroom processes in project-based learning using
multimedia: A tool for evaluators.
Robinson K., & Aronica, L. (2018). You, your child, and school: Navigate your way to the best
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