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This resource explains what makes a good problem for project-based learning (PBL). It highlights the importance of real-world relevance, decision-making, multi-stage approach, group-solving, open-ended questions, and integration of course objectives and higher-order thinking skills. It also provides a rubric for evaluating PBL problems.
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What Is a Good PBL Problem? Institute for TransformingUndergraduate EducationUniversity of Delaware www.udel.edu/pbl/ysu
Good PBL Problems… • relate to real world, motivate students • require decision-making or judgments • are multi-page, multi-stage • are designed for group-solving • pose open-ended initial questions that encourage discussion • incorporate course content objectives, higher order thinking, other skills