What Makes a Good Project? covers eight elements of projects that make them worth doing:
Purpose and relevance
Sufficient time
Complexity
Intensity
Connected to others
Access to materials
Shareable
Novelty
Stager concludes with questions teachers can ask themselves to improve the design of project-based learning experiences for students.
Project-based learning does take extra work to design and implement, but the results are worth it for everyone involved. So if you make the effort, it’s worth doing it right. As Stager says, “Making things is better than being passive, but making good things is even better!”
“Fair use” is the doctrine that allows some use of copyrighted material for education purposes without requiring the permission of the copyright holders.
However, confusion about what exactly is allowed has caused many educators and students to either avoid ALL copyrighted materials just to be safe, or to use ANYTHING without regard to copyright laws. According to a report last year from this same organization, teachers’ lack of copyright understanding impairs the teaching of critical thinking and communication skills.