Used with the kind permission of Tom March. Visit BestWebQuests.com
The 7 Red
Flags:
Warning Signs when Sifting
WebQuests
by Tom March
At BestWebQuests.com we use an assessment
matrix and star system to rate WebQuests included in the
database. However, we also learn a lot about great WebQuests by
seeing how some very promising learning activities fall just short
of this mark. As the first Tip for members, I thought it would be
helpful to provide a series of questions that can be applied to any
Web-based activity to see if in fact it is a great WebQuest.
These are NOT
WebQuests
- Step & Fetch it
- Is there a Right Answer?
Is this a traditional lesson plan dressed up as a Web
page? If the question / task involves the retrieval of a
defined, known body of knowledge, this is not a WebQuest.
WebQuests are use in ill-structured domains, places with
lots of gray and little "black and white." The idea is for
students to argue an opinion, not mumble back someone else's
thinking.
- A BestWebQuest: Take Me on Vacation!
- Hip Hop Homework
- Is the true Task Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V?
Similar to the "Step-and-and-Fetch-it" approach, Hip Hop
Homework asks students to piece together information /
answers from various sources. This is a step in the right
direction, but it still doesn't ask students to do anything
new (like interpret others' opinions). A WebQuest might ask
students to gather information from different sources, but
then prompts learners to transform this acquired knowledge
into a new understanding.
- A BestWebQuest: Literary Fan Club
- Anything Goes
- Could it be done without instruction?
Sometimes an online activity will challenge students to
do something creative or to solve a problem. This is
positive! The downfall to the "Anything Goes" approach, is
that to complete the task, students don't have to draw from
any of the previous instruction. The fix to this near
WebQuest is to ask students to apply a set of criteria to
their creation. Rather than write any play or poem, or
problem-solve any solution, invoke criteria that require
students to integrate the new learning into their product.
- A BestWebQuest: Influencing Your Photographic
Eye
- Tag Team PowerPoint
- Do the roles stay separate?
This is a common mistake that almost everyone has fallen
into at some point. Students work together as teams and each
member contributes, but their work stays in isolation from
each other. Each member knows what he or she knows, but
there's no group process that forces a synthesis of this
wealth of knowledge. The classic example is where each team
member is responsible for one slide in a presentation, one
card in a stack, or one quadrant in a newsletter. It's not
hard to take it that one extra step and have a true WebQuest
out of all this time, effort and learning. And it's a shame
not to.
- A BestWebQuest: Quest for Peace: An
Internet WebQuest on Kashmir Peace Proposal
Consensus
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These COULD be
WebQuests
- Slacker's Delight
- Can one person do all the work?
If an online activity prompts learners to construct new
meaning, does this apply to all students in the group? Or is
everyone happy if the bright kid does all the work? A killer
WebQuest jigsaws the group process so that everyone must
contribute. Even though some students' opinions might stand
out in their group, the final task must involve everyone's
participation in a substantial way. The way this could be a
great WebQuest is if it is for use by only one learner. This
would tend to be more advanced learners who can hold
multiple perspectives in mind at once and evaluate them.
Adults and gifted and talented students care good candidates
for this approach.
- A BestWebQuest: Antarctica - An Issue for all
Australians
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These ARE WebQuests, but they
could be GREAT!
- Tunnel Vision
- The 3 R's? (Real, Rich and Relevant)
The next level of achievement in WebQuest design involves
taking advantage of the contextual connections available
through the Web. If you're studying The Lord of the Flies,
go beyond Golding to street children in Algeria. When
experimenting with the applied science of bottle rockets and
catapults, discuss the ethics and efficacy of smart bombs.
When researching early colonists from the Mayflower or First
Fleet, update things to boat people and Globalization. Great
WebQuests leverage the medium and the medium enables
contextualizing the content to intrigue, perplex, and
enrich.
- A BestWebQuest: 2030: Homesteading Mars
- Ho-Hum
- Are there Ah-Ha's & Assimilation?
Whereas a Tunnel Vision approach doesn't access the
wealth of the Web's contexts and juxtapositions, a Ho-Hum
WebQuest may expose students to interesting contrasts and
comparisons during the roles phase, but the final group
process doesn't produce anything from this rich mixture and
cognitive dissonance. When students struggle to assimilate
new information and perspectives, they are creating new
schema, achieving the cognitive ah-ha's that are the heart
of transformative learning. By applying a new model, set of
constraints, or varying the scenario, learners have the map
of a conceptual pattern to help shape the development of new
schema.
- A BestWebQuest: A Separate Peace: A Teenager Experiences World
War II
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