Problem-based Learning, 1st Edition by Dorothy H. Evensen - ISBN: 9780805826456
Paperback
Extends problem-based learning beyond medical education. Edited volume for both researchers and practitioners, it presents research dealing with two complex entities vital to a problem-based curriculum: group collaboration and self-directed learning.

Problem-based Learning, 1st Edition

A Research Perspective on Learning Interactions

  • Paperback

    382 pages

  • Release Date

    1 January 2000

Summary

This volume collects recent studies conducted within the area of medical education that investigate two of the critical components of problem-based curricula–the group meeting and self-directed learning–and demonstrates that understanding these complex phenomena is critical to the operation of this innovative curriculum. It is the editors’ contention that it is these components of problem-based learning that connect the initiating “problem” with the process of effective “learning.” Reveali…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780805826456
ISBN-10:0805826459
Author:Dorothy H. Evensen, Cindy E. Hmelo, Cindy E. Hmelo-Silver
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Inc
Imprint:Routledge
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:382
Edition:1st
Release Date:1 January 2000
Weight:612g
Dimensions:229mm x 152mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

”[The editors] provide a nice summary of the research on outcomes of PBL curricula….every chapter is worthy of an eventual read. It is a notable contribution to our growing understanding of this powerful, yet puzzling, innovation that is sweeping across medical education.”—Teaching and Learning in Medicine

”…the methodological procedures devised, the analysis of the problematic issues carried out, the theoretical models elaborated, and the research agendas proposed in the book should give promising suggestions for a productive application of PBL in different fields of instruction.”—British Journal of Psychology

“This volume occupies a unique niche in the literature on problem-based learning (PBL)….Conspicuous in its absence from this literature is a scholarly treatise which does justice to the theoretical underpinnings of PBL and the growing body of empirical evidence of effectiveness (or its absence). Against this backdrop, this book is a welcome counterpoint, providing a high level of scholarship in guiding the reader to an understanding of both the theoretical background and the empirical evidence.”—Contemporary Psychology

“The information in this book should be very helpful to anyone designing…or responsible for maintaining and improving a problem-based learning curriculum.”—Howard BarrowsSouthern Illinois University, School of Medicine, From the Foreword

About The Author

Dorothy H. Evensen

Dorothy H. Evensen, Cindy E. Hmelo, Cindy E. Hmelo-Silver

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