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Webquests: A Tutorial for Teachers Jimmy D. Price, B.S.Ed. EDTC 6139 Selection, Design, & Evaluation of Multimedia in PK-12 Schools East Carolina University

Webquests: A Tutorial for Teachers

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Webquests: A Tutorial for Teachers. Jimmy D. Price, B.S.Ed. EDTC 6139 Selection, Design, & Evaluation of Multimedia in PK-12 Schools East Carolina University. What is a “Webquest?”. This tutorial is meant to train teachers in the development of original webquests. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Webquests: A Tutorial

for Teachers

Jimmy D. Price, B.S.Ed. EDTC 6139

Selection, Design, & Evaluation of Multimedia in PK-12 Schools

East Carolina University

Page 2: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

What is a “Webquest?” This tutorial is meant to train teachers in the

development of original webquests. For those of you who may not know what a webquest

is, it is an authentic learning activity, in which students utilize a teacher-developed webpage in order to follow through specific steps of satisfying the end result of the prescribed activities.

The webquest itself is “constructivist” in nature, in that the students must go through the activities in order to actively “construct” their own knowledge and understanding of the concepts to be mastered.

Page 3: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Seven Portions of a Webquest Introduction Task Resources Process Evaluation Conclusion Credits

Page 4: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Introduction This portion of the webquest should introduce

the activity or lesson scenario/problem to the students.

Should include the “big question” that the entire webquest is built upon.

Should be motivational in nature. The purpose is to prepare and “hook” the

student.

Page 5: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Task In this portion, describe crisply and clearly what the end result of the

learners’ activities will be. The task could be any of he following:

- problem or mystery to be solved;- position to be formulated and defended;- summary to be created;

- complexity to be analyzed;- a creative work;- personal insight to be articulated;- persuasive message or journalistic account to be crafted; - product to be designed, or - anything that requires the learners to process and “transform” the information they gathered.

Page 6: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Task (cont…) If the final product involves using some tool

mention it in this section. (i.e., PowerPoint; the World Wide Web; web-authoring tools; Microsoft Word; etc.)

Don’t list the steps that students go through to get to the end point here. That will come later in the “Process” section of the webquest.

Page 7: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Resources

In this portion of the webquest, list all resources (print and non-print) that the students will utilize during the webquest in order to satisfy the end result of the activities.

Page 8: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

The Process To accomplish the task, ask yourself “what steps

should the learners go through?” All steps should be listed explicitly, in a numbered

sequence. The resources should also be anchored, or imbedded,

in the steps through links to the various informational websites.

Any graphic organizers or guiding documents should be made available in this portion f the webquest.

Page 9: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Evaluation This portion should be a description to the students

regarding how their performance will be evaluated/assessed.

If cooperative grouping is utilized, be sure to specify whether there will be a common grade, or individual grades for each student in each group.

A rubric outlining performance-based standards and objectives should be utilized and made available in this portion of the webquest.

Page 10: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Conclusion

This portion of the webquest should include a short summary of what the students will have accomplished or learned by completing this activity or lesson. Any extension activities for the students should be made available in this portion, as well.

Page 11: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Credits & References List here the sources of any used text, images,

or music throughout the course of the webquest. Be sure to provide links back to the original

websites, if available. Also, list any other books or other types of

media used. Include any necessary “thank you” to secified

individuals and/or organization/group.

Page 12: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

So, how does this help my students? As previously noted, webquests are, by nature,

“constructivist.” Therefore, the focus is not on merely transference of knowledge and facts. Rather, the focus is that of authentic learning experiences, where real-world scenarios are posed as problems to be solved, or a task is outlined to be completed. In turn, students learn to apply knowledge, as well as analyze, synthesize (create; develop; generate), and evaluate authentic scenarios. As a result, students acquire the knowledge, skills, and abilities required to function as autonomous members of a problematic society in need of authentic solutions to each individual dilemma.

Page 13: Webquests: A Tutorial  for Teachers

Credits

Developed from “North Carolina Teacher Academy Webquest Information.”

Information modified by J. Price (2006).