Like most ACSD releases, John Larmer’s Setting The Standard for Project Based Learning takes an exhaustingly wordy and over-explained view of a concept that is relatively simple to understand and could be explained using less irrelevant information, less anecdotal information, and more examples and explorations into making it work.
The book has a few main portions – one is the exploration of what Project Based Learning is, and how to implement it in your classroom. Overall, a very helpful and reasonable approach to building units and courses around final projects that intend on students to collaborate and release into the world. The teacher is no longer the “sage on the stage” but rather the “guide on the side.” The buy in to a project like this, incorporating as many community members as possible into the execution of the work, is something that I have strived to do in my time in the classroom.
The other portions of the book involve showing anecdotal examples, in heavy summary, about places where entire schools have implemented it. Unnecessary, and unfortunately for any example, just one example. In fact I was surprised to read that this project based learning can be side loaded with all of the other initiatives that schools are rolling out all at the same time (such as Response to Intervention), and just reading about schools doing this was not only exhausting, but I know that the schools doing this sort of thing are doing all of the stuff at once very poorly and dictating to the professional educators they employ what they should be doing, rather than doing one thing really well and listening.
Finally, the last chapter of the book offers a lot of example units and execution strategies, as well as a wealth of outside resources that are helpful to professionals moving toward implementing this Project Based Learning strategy. I thought this was a very helpful part of the book.
I dislike when books like this explore something that could be summarized in a pamphlet – but unlike some of the other ones in the past, I see Lerner’s work here to be informative. He does include a lot of things in the book that are completely unnecessary, but the material is helpful... If administrators learned to support rather than micromanage their professionals in implementing this, and only implementing one thing at a time, I could see great success in the rollout of PBL in just about any community it is introduced to. Student leadership and ownership is crucial to success in the classroom, and in bringing the work done in the classroom out into the real world, collaboration and growth while hitting the frameworks of whatever subjects they are doing the work for would be inevitable.