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Project method

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Project Method is a philosophy of education first formulated by William Heard Kilpatrick in the early 20th Century.[1] The method is based in progressive education, is child-centred, and is in used by teachers worldwide to this day.[2] Unlike traditional conservative education, proponents of the Project Method attempt to allow the student to solve problems with as little teacher direction as possible. The teacher is seen more as a facilitator than a deliver of knowledge and information.

Students in a Project Method environment should be allowed to explore and experience their environment through their senses and, in a sense, direct their own learning by their individual interests. Very little is taught from textbooks and the emphasis is on experiential learning, rather than rote and memorization. A Project Method classroom focuses on democracy and collaboration to solve "purposeful" problems.

Kilpatrick devised four classes of projects for his method: construction (such as writing a play), enjoyment (such as experiencing a concert), problem (for instance, discussing a complex social problem like poverty), and specific learning (learning of skills such as swimming).

  1. ^ Kilpatrick, William Heard (1929). The Project Method: The Use of the Purposeful Act in the Educative Process. Teachers College, Columbia University.
  2. ^ Gutek, Gerald L. (2009). New Perspectives on Philosophy and Education. Pearson Education, Inc. ISBN 0-205-59433-6.