Source: faria.edu
The product is developed based on your learning goal and serves as a measure of how well you have achieved that goal. For example, if your learning goal is learning Japanese, creating a children’s book in both Japanese and English would show that you have effectively applied your language skills. If the product is successful, it indicates that you have successfully met your learning goal.
Example:
Learning goal: Developing my cooking skills about Bosnian food.
"As a child, I loved cooking with the ingredients I have at home with youtube tutorials so as of currently I want to make a youtube tutorial for cooking Bosnian cuisine. specifically because it is what I am not really good so I want to improve with feedback from youtube"
Product goal: a Youtube cooking channel with a minimum of 20 subscribers.
Talk about the evaluation of ur product based on the criteria.
Strengths (What did you do well?):
My product came out successfully with multiple interactions from the viewers.
Evaluate your product based on the success criteria you've made. In this example, you could talk about the feedback you've gathered from the viewers, and how you would use this to improve your project.
Limitations (What could you can improve on?):
"I cannot cook some menus traditionally because I don't have the right tool and ingredients to make it."
This limitation can be improved by asking for feedback or tips from the target audience.
You could research on tools and ingredient that can be used as a substitute.
Extensions (What could you add if you were given the chance to do this again?):
Adding hacks and tricks to cooking a specific dish
Conduct a research in depth about a specific dish then come up with a way to simplify some steps.
Interview a Bosnian chef and ask them how they usually make it with the given equipment while keeping the original flavour.
Dutton, Lenny. “Learning Goal and Product.” MYP Personal Project, 2021, https://guide.fariaedu.com/myp-personal-project/setting-a-goal/learning-goal-and-product