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"Professor Polmans book provides the best and most nuanced window into the life of a classroom, a teacher, and a group of children seeking to make sense of new technologies that are transforming the landscape of learning, assessment, and pedagogy."
Roy Pea, Director, SRI, Center for Technology in Learning, Stanford University
"Polman thoroughly describes and analyzes a case study of the implementation of project-based teaching in the classroom. The study provides practical insights that should prove useful to teachers who seek to involve students in meaningful, interesting, project-based science activities."
Marvin Druger, Meredith Professor for Teaching Excellence, Syracuse University
This interpretive case study of an exceptional teacher provides a fascinating account of the difficulties and rewards of putting innovative teaching into practice. Joseph Polman uses richly detailed descriptions of classroom life to explore one teachers attempts to make technology-enhanced, open-ended inquiry a successful mode of teaching science in the secondary school classroom. The book provides lively examples of what it means to "learn by doing," describing strategies that educators can use to move beyond traditional textbook approaches and interact with their students in ways that encourage them to become active science learners.
The book explores the complexity of changing practice, detailing the conflicts that emerge when a teacher challenges traditional approaches to teaching and learning, and provides a historical and theoretical background for understanding current controversies in educational practices. By analyzing teacher and student work within the context of the entire school, Polman demonstrates how the structural and cultural realities of the school itself complicate the enactment of pedagogical innovation in the classroom.
This sensitive and thorough examination of project-based learning will appeal to many educators seeking to improve their teaching practice. School change advocates, administrators, and policy makers interested in understanding the social, cultural, and material constraints that affect the implementation of reform will also find this account enlightening.
Joseph Polman is an assistant professor in Educational Technology at the University of Missouri, St. Louis.