Problem and Project Based Learning Open access

Expanded PBL Curriculum Model for Diverse Educational Settings

Sean O’Connor, Jason Power, Nicolaas Blom

Linköping electronic conference proceedings | Jun 14, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

Over the years, engineering education has continually adapted to meet the changing needs of society, technological progress, and industrial demands. In recent years, these drivers have included societal challenges such as sustainability and ethical innovation, technological advances like artificial intelligence (AI) and the growing electrification of homes and transportation, and industrial demands for engineers with strong cross-disciplinary collaboration, communication, and management skills. At the same time, engineering education institutions are facing new and growing challenges, including larger, more diverse student cohorts alongside limited institutional budgets. To address these drivers and challenges, researchers in engineering education have recommended the use of more flexible, student-centred, and active learning strategies, designed to reflect authentic engineering environments. One such suitable strategy is problem and project based learning (PBL), which can be implemented in traditional face-to-face, online and blended environments. However, recent research and global events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, have highlighted the need for clearer guidance to support engineering educators in adopting PBL in digital learning environments. In this paper, the authors seek to support engineering educators’ development, implementation, and evaluation of PBL in online and blended environments by explaining the PBL spectrum and proposing an expanded PBL framework. This proposed framework builds on the PBL Curriculum Model developed by Kolmos et al. (2009) by including additional consideration for diverse educational environments.

Direct answer

What can I do from this paper page?

Use this page to scan "Expanded PBL Curriculum Model for Diverse Educational Settings" quickly: start with the summary and abstract, then check the authors, source, topics, and related papers. From here, open Scollr to follow Problem and Project Based Learning research, save the paper, or map adjacent work.

Authors

Researchers on this paper

Sean O’Connor

first | University of Limerick

Jason Power

middle | University of Limerick | ORCID 0000-0002-9082-7380

Nicolaas Blom

last | University of Limerick | ORCID 0000-0002-6919-8380

Research areas

Follow related topics

Citation

BibTeX

@article{OConnor2026Expanded,
  title = {Expanded PBL Curriculum Model for Diverse Educational Settings},
  author = {Sean O’Connor and Jason Power and Nicolaas Blom},
  journal = {Linköping electronic conference proceedings},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.3384/ecp213.1478},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.3384/ecp213.1478}
}

FAQ

Using this paper in a discovery workflow

How do I find related work for this paper?

Use the related papers and topic links on this page as starting points. In Scollr, you can also open the paper and build a literature map around its references, citing papers, and related work.

How can I keep up with new Problem and Project Based Learning research papers?

Follow Problem and Project Based Learning research in Scollr. New papers from the topic flow into a personalized feed, and you can save useful studies to revisit later.

Can I cite this paper from this page?

This page includes a static BibTeX block for Expanded PBL Curriculum Model for Diverse Educational Settings. Always verify the DOI, source, and publication details against the publisher record before submitting a manuscript.

Follow this research in Scollr

Follow the topics and authors behind this paper, save useful studies, and build a literature map when you are ready to go deeper.

Get the app