Logo image
Challenge-based learning implementation in K-12 education: A systematic literature review
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Challenge-based learning implementation in K-12 education: A systematic literature review

M Gandini and Daniele Morselli
Frontiers in Education, Vol.10, pp.1-14
10
2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10863/51067

Abstract

Challenge-based learning K-12 Science Technology Arts Engineering Mathematics student centered learning Systematic review
Introduction: Challenge-Based Learning (CBL) is an emerging pedagogy designed to foster student engagement, collaboration, and problem-solving through real-world challenges. While widely investigated in secondary and higher education, CBL implementation in primary contexts remains limited and underexplored, highlighting the need for systematic analysis of its trends, methodologies, and outcomes. Methods: This systematic literature review followed the PRISMA 2020 guidelines. Searches across ProQuest, Scopus, and Web of Science (2004–2024) yielded 1,209 records, with 706 duplicates removed and 440 excluded after screening. Sixteen journal articles and conference proceedings focusing on K-12 CBL were included and analyzed across school level, research type, methods, pedagogical components, assessment strategies, and focus areas. Results: CBL publications increased between 2006 and 2024, with equal distribution between journal articles (n=8) and conference proceedings (n=8). Empirical studies (n=12) predominated over theoretical ones (n=4), primarily using mixed methods (n=12). Secondary schools (n=9) were most represented, followed by primary (n=7), with STEAM disciplines dominant (n=10). Key pedagogical components included problem-solving (n=15), collaborative learning (n=10), and guided discovery (n=7). Assessment practices featured summative (n=9), rubrics (n=8), and formative approaches (n=7). Discussion: The review highlights the potential of CBL to support key competence development across K-12 environments, calling for stronger theoretical foundations, teacher training, inclusive practices, and longitudinal assessment. STEAM applications predominate prevail, yet opportunities exist also in other subjects. The findings offer practical insights for educators, policymakers, and researchers, emphasizing the need for future research on qualitative student perspectives, robust teacher training, and sustained partnerships to support scalable, equitable CBL implementation aligned with 21st-century goals for lifelong learning competences.
pdf
GandiniMorselli860.99 kBDownloadView
Open Access
url
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/education/articles/10.3389/feduc.2025.1680347/fullView

Details

Metrics

10 File views/ downloads
17 Record Views
Logo image