Project-Based Learning Unit Planner
Design a multi-week unit where students investigate a real problem, produce a meaningful product, and present to an authentic audience: the full arc of project-based learning, from launch to exhibition.
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- Structured PDF with guiding questions per section
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When to use this template
- Planning a multi-week unit around a real problem or community challenge
- When you want students to produce something that matters to an audience beyond the classroom
- Teaching 21st-century skills (collaboration, communication, critical thinking) alongside content
- Cross-disciplinary or team-teaching contexts
- When you want to significantly increase student engagement and ownership
Template sections
Project-based learning works when the problem is real, the product matters, and students have genuine agency in how they investigate and present their findings. This planner structures the full arc (driving question, investigation, creation, critique, and exhibition) so the project does not just happen at the end but drives learning from day one.
See what our AI buildsAdapting this Template
For Science
PBL Unit pairs well with lab work: the structured phases keep inquiry focused while leaving room for student-driven investigation.
For Social Studies
PBL Unit supports source analysis and debate by giving students structured time for evidence gathering and discussion.
For ELA
For literacy lessons, PBL Unit helps scaffold close reading and analytical writing with clear thinking phases.
About the PBL Unit framework
Project-Based Learning (PBL) is one of the most well-researched models for deep, lasting learning. When done well, students work on a real or realistic challenge over multiple weeks, producing something that matters to an audience beyond the classroom.
What separates real PBL from "doing a project": Most school projects happen after learning. Students apply what they were taught to make a poster or presentation. In genuine PBL, the project is the learning. Students encounter content through the investigation process and develop skills because the project demands them.
The seven design elements (from PBLworks): Strong PBL units have a challenging problem or question, sustained inquiry, authenticity, student voice and choice, reflection, critique and revision, and a public product. This planner builds each of these elements into the unit design.
The driving question: The heart of a PBL unit is a driving question that students genuinely want to answer. "How might we reduce plastic waste in our school?" motivates differently than "Study environmental science Chapter 7." The question should be provocative, open-ended, and connected to something students can actually do.
Managing the arc: PBL units have a launch (creating urgency and curiosity), an investigation phase (building knowledge and skills needed for the project), a creation phase (producing the product), critique and revision cycles, and a public presentation or exhibition. This planner maps that arc so each phase has enough time and structure.
Authentic audience: Students work harder and care more when they present to people other than just their teacher. Community partners, local organizations, parents, students in other classes, or even a panel of teachers from other subjects all create real stakes and genuine motivation.
This planner walks you through every phase of PBL unit design, from writing a driving question that will sustain student inquiry to planning an exhibition that makes the learning public.
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