WebQuest Design Patterns This
is a list of patterns derived from existing WebQuests that are instructionally
solid. To qualify as a design pattern, the lesson should be easily modified
to cover different content while using the same basic structure. Each
pattern is distinct from the others in terms of the kinds of content
it can be used for, and the organization of the Introduction, Task,
Process and Evaluation sections. With templates
that are specific to each design pattern, it should be easier to hit
the ground running when starting to create a new WebQuest. |
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Name
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Description
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Instructional
Purpose
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Examples
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Alternative History | Hypothesize about fictional realities in which historical events turn out different from our own. Extrapolate a chain of cause and effect which that one difference would create. Templates: |
To develop understanding of a historical event; and predict how events would be transformed |
Civil War Revisited The Salem Witch Trials: Rewrite History Decisions |
Analyzing for Bias | Analyze sources of information for bias and use that analysis to articulate a point of view and demonstrate its impact. Templates: |
To teach the structure and variations of various forms of expression such as editorials, editorial or political cartoons, and propaganda in advertising. To teach a general approach to analyzing messages and developing a point of view in one of the above modes of expression.
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Political Cartoons Advertising Propaganda Webquest Cyberganda Advertising |
Behind the Book | Use the web to learn more about the time and place in which a work of literature is set. Templates: |
Deepening ones understanding of a work of literature by studying its setting. |
The Real Johnny Tremain The Salem Sentinel F. Scott Fitzgerald and the 1920s |
Beyond the Book | Deepen ones understanding of a work of literature by extending it beyond what was originally written or by mapping it onto an entirely different domain. Templates: |
Develop creativity. Extend understanding of the characters, plot, setting and meaning of a work of literature. |
Rewriting Romeo and Juliet Odyssey Theme Park Letters to Nora and Torvald OdysseyQuest Give Jonas a New Home |
Change Models | Students look at how change occurs in society. Models are analyzed and are adapted as students create action plans for issues they feel strongly about. Templates: |
To identify and analyze how change occurs in society. To teach a select number of models for change that students could evaluate. To help students synthesize these models of change to develop their own action plans in an issue in which they feel strongly. |
Change the World...How? |
Collaborative Design | Resolve conflicting viewpoints about an issue sufficiently to work together to design a plan, policy or tangible object within a given set of constraints. Templates: |
To learn factual information relevant to the issue as well as the associated opinions of the participants; to learn to use consensus building techniques; to develop an understanding of how to create a project within constraints. |
The Banned Books WebQuest Should Schools Filter Web Content? |
Commemorative | Decide on an appropriate way to commemorate an event or person. Templates: |
To study a person, institution or event more deeply in ways that celebrate its complexity. Use judgment to determine which aspects of the subject are laudable or important. To learn how to represent abstract ideas in concrete form, and/or to summarize many concrete instances into a more general form. |
Booker T Washington & W.E.B. Dubois Monument on the Mall Helge Instad |
Compilation | Assemble and organize a body of knowledge in a form that would be useful to someone else. Examples might include cookbooks, a field guide to a particular set of wildlife, a dictionary of terms used in a specific realm; a Who's Who; a "Best of..." collection. Templates: |
To learn broadly about a domain and the examples, facts, and organizational structures within that domain. To make distinctions about what is worth including and what is not. To impose an organizational scheme on the information in a way that makes sense for its intended audience. |
Compiling a Literature Anthology Are You What You Eat? |
Concept Clarification | An analysis of an abstract concept through investigation of examples and the identification of critical and less critical attributes Templates: |
To analyze an abstract idea to develop a deeper understanding of its meaning and implication. Abstract ideas and concepts might include, but are not be limited to, heroism, courage, freedom, and patriotism. Identification of critical and less critical attributes will aid in discerning the boundaries or fuzziness of the concepts. |
In Search of a Hero |
Concrete Design | Design a physical space or object to meet a specified goal while working within realistic resource constraints. Templates: |
To develop knowledge of the options (physical things, styles, themes) available within a given domain as well as the trade-offs involved in choosing among them. To develop deeper understanding of practical constraints and how to determine good solutions. To provide practice at calculation and quantifying things and knowledge of the laws of physics, statutes, economics, and any other realm that governs activity within this domain. |
The Architect's Chair Design a Home |
Exhibit | Assemble a group of objects in a physical space for the purpose of exposing an audience to them for a specific goal. Choose what will be exhibited and how the exhibited will be laid out. Templates: |
To learn about a specific body of knowledge (e.g., gods of Egypt; transportation in the 19th Century; types of fabric). To develop judgment about what is worth showing to a particular audience for a particular purpose. To develop a rationale for a sequence or framework in which the objects are to be seen. |
Bellevue Musee Cold War Museum Art Exhibit! |
Generic | This is the template to use when you can't find a design pattern to fit your needs. It is a WebQuest in the most general sense. Templates: |
The generic template captures the most general model of what a WebQuest is. Each of the parts of the WebQuest (Introduction, Task, etc.) are described without any reference to a particular content area or type of learner outcome. |
Matrix of Examples (over 600!) |
Genre Analysis | Analyze a specific form of creative expression and use that analysis to create a new example in that form. Templates: |
To teach the structure and variations of a genre and more generally to teach that most understandable writing is based on some set of conventions. To teach a general approach to analysis and to guide observation and close reading. |
Realm of Fairy Tales Where Did We Come From? |
Historical Story | Apply the principles of effective story writing to dramatizing historical events or the lives of historical personalities. Templates: |
To teach the elements of an effective short story and to use that vehicle for understanding and dramatizing a specific event or theme from history. Consistent with California Learning Standards: Language Arts: 2.9.6 - "Write biographical and autobiographical narratives or short stories." Social Science: 4.5.9 - "Students distinguish fact from opinion in historical narratives and stories." |
A Dickens of a Quest |
In the Style of... | Sharpen your understanding of a particular artist or artistic style by creating a new work in a similar way. Templates: |
Develop an understanding of the concept of artistic style in general. Apply this understanding to a specific style. |
Influencing your Photographic Eye Federica Garcia Lorca Children as Illustrators Illistrating Endangered Species Jacob Lawrence |
Meeting of the Minds | Assemble a group of students who will role-play historical figures for the purpose of a discussing a given topic. Examples might include a dinner party with people from a certain time period, a discussion panel of figures from different time periods who discuss a given topic from their assumed viewpoint. Templates: |
To learn about important historical events, the figures involved, and the reasons behind their actions. This knowledge will be synthesized into the positions these characters take on the topics presented by the discussion moderator. |
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the 1920s All Aboard for Jamestown What Would Dewey Do? Meet the Immigrants Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? |
On Trial | Students prepare for and perform a mock trial live or on video based on current events, literature, history, or any other conflicted situation. This Design Pattern lies in the intersection of the Venn diagram between judgment and persuasion. Templates: |
It is common that learners play a role while accomplishing a judgment task. Excellent WebQuests of this type have been developed within a mock trial format. A well designed assignment of this type will either provide a rubric or other set of criteria for making the judgment, or require and support learners in creating their own criteria for evaluation. In the second case, it is important to get learners to explain and defend their system of evaluation. |
The Amistad Trial The Rain Forest Project |
Parallel Diaries | Write the diaries of two or more people in specific times and places while keeping to a common structure that shows their similarities and differences. Templates: |
To compare and contrast two individuals or two places and/or periods in history; to develop point of view. |
Witchcraft or Witchhunt? |
Persuasive Message | Research and analyze information on a given topic, form an opinion, and construct a research-based persuasive message to convince others of the validity of the position chosen. Templates: |
Reading: Generate relevant questions about readings on issues that can be researched. Extend ideas presented in primary or secondary sources through original analysis, evaluation, and elaboration.
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Will the Real William Shakespeare Please Stand Up? Studying the Background of The Crucible |
Policy Briefing | Organize a policy conference focusing on a global issue for participants to discuss the issues from different points of view. Templates: |
To apply appropriate interviewing techniques, deliver persuasive arguments (including evaluation and analysis of problems and solutions and causes and effects), deliver descriptive or expository presentations, historical interpretation, research, evidence, and point of view. And to teach the art of negotiation. |
WaterQuest International Seminar on Global Issues |
Recommendation | Make a group recommendation to solve a problem. Templates: |
To build research, compromise and consensus building skills while exploring a multi-faceted problem. Review thoughts, theories and multiple points of view to make informed individual opinions and a single group recommendation. |
A Forest Forever Acid Rain WebQuest Genetica's Dilemna |
Simulated Diary | Write a daily account from the point of view of a particular individual in a specific time and place. Templates: |
To develop understanding of a particular time and place or of a specific individual. To develop the concept of point of view. |
Ancient Civilization Diary Experiencing India's Caste System Civil War Journal Journey to Japan Eureka! Australian Gold Rush |
Time Capsule | Capture the essence of a particular period in history by selecting a number of artifacts to include in a time capsule. Templates: |
To guide a survey of a period and develop judgment about the relative importance of its activities and products. |
A Separate Peace A Moment in Time |
Travel Account | Create an account of a trip as if you had actually taken it. Templates: |
To develop knowledge of a particular time and place; to practice narrative writing. |
A Traveller's Graphic Journal |
Travel Plan | Design an itinerary while working within realistic constraints. Templates: |
Teach factual knowledge about a particular place or set of places; budget time and money; optimize a solution that balances several competing possibilities. |
Canada: A Family Vacation The Trip Exploring Oregon |